drier, driest
"Dried" is the past and past participle of dry. As an adjective, the comparative and superlative forms of dry are drier and driest respectively.
Dry, drier, driest. Adjective, comparative adjective, superlative adjective.
drier and driest
The comparative degree of "dry" is "drier," and the superlative degree is "driest." These forms are used to compare the dryness of two or more items or conditions. For example, you might say "This towel is drier than that one," or "This is the driest place I've ever visited."
driest
Dry, drier, driest.
"Dried" is the past and past participle of dry. As an adjective, the comparative and superlative forms of dry are drier and driest respectively.
Dry, drier, driest. Adjective, comparative adjective, superlative adjective.
drier and driest
The comparative degree of "dry" is "drier," and the superlative degree is "driest." These forms are used to compare the dryness of two or more items or conditions. For example, you might say "This towel is drier than that one," or "This is the driest place I've ever visited."
Well, "dryly" is the adverbial form of "dry," who's comparative form would be "drier."
driest
There is nothing wrong with the comparative drier, but native speakers frequently use "more + adjective" instead of the comparatives. Sometimes a comparative will just sound strange to a speaker, who then replaces it with the "more + adjective" phrase. I use drier and driest without any hesitation.
The comparative form of dry is drierexample: Bailey's clothes are drier than Mike's clothes
"Dry cleaner" can be written as two separate words ("dry cleaner") or as a compound word ("drycleaner"). Both forms are commonly used and accepted.
Dry is a synonym for the word arid.
The root word of "dried" is "dry."