A superlative adjective is used to describe the greatest or best of something. For example most carefully and smallest are the superlatives of carefully and small.
No, the phrase "at the most earliest" is not correct grammar. "Most" and "earliest" are both superlatives, so using them together is redundant. The correct phrase would be "at the earliest" or "at the most."
If you mean: Is the sentence "Is this grammar right?" grammatically correct (or right), then yes, it is.
Well if you mean cahier de grammaire, it means grammar notebook
"Gramática" in English means "grammar." It refers to the rules and structures that govern the use of a particular language.
Adjective Of or relating to grammar. Well formed; in accordance with the productive rules of the grammar of a language
Because superlatives are the best.
Positive superlatives are used to put things on a pedestal, showing that it is the best.
No, the phrase "at the most earliest" is not correct grammar. "Most" and "earliest" are both superlatives, so using them together is redundant. The correct phrase would be "at the earliest" or "at the most."
Statements with superlatives are often false because strong statements are easy to disprove.
All and only
superlatives
bad - worse - worst
Stories from the Vaults - 2007 Superlatives 1-2 was released on: USA: 2007
There is only one - most generous
hotter, hottest
This is a very badly worded question. If you mean "Is the word 'elder' a superlative?", the answer is "No, it is a comparative". If you mean something else, please reword the question to make your meaning clear.
There's no such thing as 'grammer'. If you mean 'grammar', it's generally a contraction of 'of'.