happier.
The word happier has "er" added and increases the term happy to a greater happiness i.e. happy and then happier
happier
happier
Any word that ends in y has to be changed to ie. eg: happy=happier,lazy=lazier
Happy is an adjective. The adverb form is happily. The comparative adverb form is more happily, and the superlative is most happily. When a comparative has two syllables as in happy, in most cases it can be used two ways (1) happier, or (2) more happy. Either way is correct. However, the -LY adverb forms must use "more" and "most" to express the comparative and superlative.
The phrase "more happier" is grammatically incorrect because "happier" is already a comparative form of the adjective "happy." Instead, one should say "happier" when comparing two things or "more happy" in certain contexts, though "happier" is more commonly used. Therefore, it’s best to say "happier" or "more happy," depending on the structure of the sentence.
I would say happier like I'm a lot happier now not I'm more happy now. Hope this helps x
No, it is an adjective. You can be happy, happier, or happiest, but you cannot happy.
The possible word is "happier" (more happy).
Cats purr when they are happy. The more they purr they happier they are.
Fröhlicher translates as happy, happier, cheerful, more cheerful.
as comparative: happier as superlative : happiest for more comparative and superlatives visit the link below.
The "er" changes the meaning of happy to "more happy". "Mike is happier" means the same as "Mike is more happy". Happy is the root word, meaning joyous, and happier is the comparative form of happy, like happiest is the superlative form.
The base word for "happier" is "happy."
The word happier has "er" added and increases the term happy to a greater happiness i.e. happy and then happier
The word happier has "er" added and increases the term happy to a greater happiness i.e. happy and then happier
happier