sharped, sharpened
Sharper is the comparative form of the word sharp.
What is the comparative and superlative of Often
Comparative is more and superlative is most.
The comparative degree is wider.
The comparative is safe, and the superlative is safest.
Sharper is the comparative form of the word sharp.
Sharp, sharper, and sharpest are the comparative and superlative degrees of the word sharp.
There is no comparative of get.
The comparative of "first" is "earlier" or "prior".
Kelvin Wesley Sharp has written: 'A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF A TECH PREP INITIATIVE IN NURSE AIDE TRAINING IN THE CENTRAL UNITED STATES' -- subject(s): Education, Higher, Health Sciences, Nursing, Higher Education, Nursing Health Sciences
comparative
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The comparative and superlativeforms of grand are: Comparative: grander Superlative: grandest
His is a possessive pronoun and, as such, does not have a comparative form.
The comparative form of "clean" is "cleaner."