The comparative form of the adjective "wise" is "wiser."
The comparative form of "wise" is "wiser" and the superlative form is "wisest."
The comparative form of "wise" is "wiser" and the superlative form is "wisest."
wiser, wisest
Comparative-more honest Superlative-most honest Trust me. Since you cannot add "er" or "est," and the adjective is a regular adjective, you can only add "more" and "most."
The comparative adjective for humble is "more humble."
The word 'wiser' is not a noun, it's the comparative form of the adjective: wise, wiser, wisest.Wiseness is the abstract noun form for the adjective, wise. Another abstract noun is wisdom.
Wiser is the comparative form; wisest is the superlative.
The comparative form of "wise" is "wiser" and the superlative form is "wisest."
The comparative form of the adjective "long" is "longer."
The comparative form of "wise" is "wiser" and the superlative form is "wisest."
The adjective form of wisdom is "wise."
Yes, the word redder is the comparative form of the adjective red.The superlative form is reddest.
No, sideways is not a comparative form of an adjective.
"Pride" is a noun and a verb and as such does not have a comparative form. The adjective "prideful" has the comparative "more prideful", while the adjective "proud" has the comparative "prouder."
No, it is a comparative adjective. (comparative form of the adjective large)A "proper adjective" is a capitalized form derived from a proper noun (e.g. French).
Perhaps you mean the comparative form: the comparative form of the adjective pretty is prettier. (The superlative form is prettiest, but comparative sounds more like cumulative.)
The comparative adjective is worse, the superlative form is worst.