positive: red
comparative: redder
superlative: reddest
The word thrifty is short enough that the comparative and superlative forms are thriftier and thriftiest.
Dative ; Red Comparative ; Redder ( or More red) Superlative, ; Reddest. ( or most red)
Yes, the word redder is the comparative form of the adjective red.The superlative form is reddest.
redder, reddest
The comparative form compares two things eg the red car is faster than the blue car, (faster is the comparative adjective).The superlative form is used to compare three or more things and to pick out one as being more (something) than all the others. The red car is fast and so is the blue car but the silver one is the fastest, (fastest is the superlative adjective)
redder, reddest sadder, saddest
redder
better - comparativebest - superlativeJon is better at maths than me.My sister is the best at maths in her class.Comparative :better- superlative : bestThe comparative form of "good" is "better", and the superlative form of "good" is "best". "Better" is used when comparing two things. "Best" is used when comparing more than two things. For example, the blue notebook is better than the red one. (Two things are being compared.) Out of the three notebooks, the blue one is the best. (Three things are being compared.)Good; Better; Best
redest
redder
redder, reddest
Like other adjectives, colors become comparative and superlative with the suffixes -er and -est. This could apply to literal colors, as pure red is redder than an almost-red shade of brown. It is probably more common to hear these in a figurative context. For example, in the U. S. a "red" State is politically Republican while a "blue" State is Democrat. The state with the highest percent of Republicans would be the reddest. The most environmentally friendly of some companies or technologies wold be the greenest. Since "blue" also means "sad," I could say I was blue when I lost yesterday's newspaper on the bus but I was bluer when I lost my girlfriend.