The comparative form of "cautious" is "more cautious," and the superlative form is "most cautious." When comparing two entities, you use "more cautious," while "most cautious" is used when referring to the highest degree of caution among three or more entities.
most cautious
words ending with letter 'e' will have it's comparitive form ending with 'r' and superlative form with 'st' along with 'e'.so here it is able,abler and ablest.
"Studying" is not a superlative, as it is not an adjective. "Most studious" is a superlative of "studious."
Superlative the silly
What is the comparative and superlative of Often
Paler is comparitive, palest is superlative.
more useful and most useful
It depends on whether you are talking about degrees of heaviness or illumination:lighter and lightestbrighter and brightest
most cautious
most cautious
Comparative: more carefully Superlative: most carefully
smoothestThe superlative of 'smooth' is ' smoothest'.
Comparitive = bitterer or more commonly more bitterSuperlative= most bitter NOT bitteristHope that helps!
comparative of safely is more safely and the superlative form is most safely
most expensive
words ending with letter 'e' will have it's comparitive form ending with 'r' and superlative form with 'st' along with 'e'.so here it is able,abler and ablest.
The comparative degree of "loveable" is "more loveable," and the superlative degree is "most loveable." Since "loveable" is a longer adjective, it typically forms its comparative and superlative forms using "more" and "most" rather than changing the word directly.