That is not a question, but a statement. Statements in English are suffixed by period (.), not question mark (?).
heavy - heavier - heaviest
Although the heavy snowfall was not expected, the highway department respond with surprising celerity.
A large and heavy piece of furniture, such as a solid wood armoire or a piano, will have the most inertia and give furniture movers the most difficulty in moving due to its mass and resistance to changes in motion.
A wheel and axle give you a mechanical advantage by reducing the amount of force needed to move an object. The larger wheel allows for a greater distance to be covered with less effort, making it easier to move heavy objects. By applying force to the wheel, the axle rotates, transferring the force to the load being moved.
Inertia is the tendency of an object to resist changes in its motion. For example, a heavy object is harder to push or stop because it has more inertia. Inertia also explains why objects in motion tend to stay in motion and objects at rest tend to stay at rest unless acted upon by an external force.
A ramp gives you mechanical advantage by allowing you to exert your force over a longer distance to move an object vertically. By using a ramp, you can reduce the amount of force needed to lift an object to a certain height compared to lifting it straight up. This makes it easier to move heavy objects.
Sure! Please provide the adjectives you'd like me to give the comparative and superlative degrees for.
Busy becomes busier and busiest.
most expentsive more more more,,
more graceful most graceful :D
Comparative degree of funny: Funnier Superlative degree of funny: Funniest Thank you hope this helped :)
The comparative and superlative forms of "good" are very irregular: they do not contain "good" at all. The comparative form is "better"; the superlative form is "best".
please give me the right answer
Adjectives and adverbs that describe an absolute state or condition and do not have comparative or superlative forms
shier
cleverer, cleverest
angrier, angriest
'Shyer' or 'shier'; 'shyest' or 'shiest'. You could also use 'more shy' and 'most shy', which are preferable to the other terms in some respects.