"Older" is the comparative form of old. The superlative form is oldest.
Comparative: older Superlative: oldest
The comparative form of somber is somberer.
"Older" is not a verb. It is the comparative form of the adjective "old."
No, older is an adjective. It is the comparative form of old.
The comparative of sad is sadder, and the superlative is saddest.comparative - saddersuperlative - saddest
saddersadder
Sad is a short adjective so you just add -er to make the comparative form = sadder You add -est to make the superlative form = saddest
sadder, saddest
comparative = sadder superlative = saddest
sadder
The comparative degree of "sad" is "sadder."
redder, reddest sadder, saddest
Oh, dude, you can totally say both! "Sadder" is the comparative form of "sad," so you can use it when you're comparing two things. "More sad" is the comparative form of "sad" too, so you can use it when you're feeling extra fancy. It's like choosing between a regular burger and a gourmet burger - they both get the job done, but one just sounds a bit fancier, you know?
Comparatie form is more sorrowfully Superlative form is most sorrowfully
word comparative superlative pretty prettier prettiest hungry hungrier hungriest sad sadder saddest
There are two forms of comparative and one superlative. For sad, these are sad, sadder, and saddest. He was sad. His friend seemed sadder. But the girl was the saddest of the three children.