More comfortable and most comfortable are the comparative and superlatives for comfortable.
more comfortable, most comfortable
Adjectives can be classified by degree. If the positive form is bright, the comparative form is brighter and the superlative form is brightest.
"Bit" is a noun and a verb and, as such, does not have a comparative or superlative form.
Sweetie is a noun and does not have a comparative or superlative form.
"Larger" is the comparative form of large. The superlative form is largest.
positive: red comparative: redder superlative: reddest
Lazy is the positive degree. The comparative is lazier, and the superlative is laziest.
Nouns do not have 'positive' forms.Adjectives are the part of speech that are positive, comparative, or superlative; for example:The positive form of the adjective 'cold' is 'cold'.The comparative form is 'colder'.The superlative form is 'coldest'.
most brilliant
more comfortable, most comfortable
superlative - bravest comparative - braver positive - brave
Adjectives can be classified by degree. If the positive form is bright, the comparative form is brighter and the superlative form is brightest.
If "positive" is really the word you mean: Adjectives may be positive, comparative or superlative. In English, pronouns are not described as positive but adjectives are positive and verbs can be positive or negative. A positive adjective is the simple for of the adjective, from which the comparative and superlative are formed. For example, smart is the positive form of the adjective; smarter is the comparative form; and smartest is the superlative form. Verbs can be positive or negative. for example, has or has not (hasn't); does or does not (doesn't); can or can not (can't), etc.
comparative - merrier superlative - merriest
Positive=Odd Comparative=More Odd Superlative=Most Odd
Positive is noble. Comparative is nobler. Superlative is noblest.
The comparative form of cloudy is "cloudier". The superlative form is "cloudiest".