Both "friendlier" and "more friendly" are grammatically correct. However, "friendlier" is the more commonly used comparative form of the adjective "friendly." In general, single-syllable adjectives typically use the "-er" ending for comparatives, while multi-syllable adjectives use "more." In informal contexts, "friendlier" is often preferred.
Friendlier and friendliest, respectively. More and most friendly are also correct, sometimes.
Friendlier or more friendly are the comparatives, and friendliest or most friendly are the superlatives.
It would be 'friendlier' but I'm sure you can use either.
"Friend" is a noun and a verb and, as such, does not have a comparative form. The comparative form of the adjective friendly is friendlier.
No, "most friendly" is not grammatically correct. The correct form would be "friendliest" when comparing three or more things.
Yes, Alligators are more friendly to Humans than Crocodiles.
Some adjectives it is possible to use more or -ierI think friendly is one of those adjectives:I think Jack is more friendly than Jill.I think Jill is friendlier than Jack.
Friendly comparative is a linguistic construction used to compare two things or people in a positive or kind way, emphasizing similarities or positive attributes. It often involves using adjectives such as "friendlier" or "more friendly" to indicate that one thing is more welcoming or pleasant than another.
In the US, I don't believe the whole of Northerners is friendlier than the whole of Southerners and vice versa. There are regions of both parts of the US whereas the people tend to be friendlier, but there are mean and off putting attitudes all over the country.
More correct
more correct, most correct
Its simple. All you have to do is show it more attention. Try to handle it and stroke it, be kind to it. Eventually it will see that it has nothing to be afraid/scared of. It will start to like the attention and be friendly/friendlier.