You might mean the adverb 'very.' Synonyms that are stronger include extremely, exceedingly, greatly, particularly, remarkably, substantially, etc.
examples: She is very intelligent. She is remarkably intelligent. She is highly intelligent. She is extremely intelligent.
If you mean the adjective 'very,' some synonyms are exact, identical, precise.
example: What bothered me most was the very answer she gave.
The word "stronger" is a comparative adjective and does not have a plural form. Adjectives in English do not change based on number; instead, they modify nouns that may be plural. For example, you can say "stronger players" to indicate that there are multiple players who are stronger.
Stronger is a comparative adjective.
The phrase "very adj" serves to intensify the meaning of the adjective that follows it. By using "very," the speaker emphasizes the degree or extent of the quality described by the adjective, making it stronger or more pronounced. For example, in "very happy," "very" amplifies the happiness being described.
strongest
Very dull is an adjective. (Dull is the adjective and very is an adverb.)
No, the word 'stronger' is the comparative form for the adjective strong.positive: strongcomparative: strongersuperlative: strongest
No, it is an adverb. The combination "instead of" is a preposition.
instead of saying stronger you could say hunk (that means stronger)
The word very is an adverb.
Very is an adverb, and pleasant is an adjective.
No, it is not an adverb. Stronger is the comparative form of the adjective strong. The related adverb form would be "more strongly."
perfect used as an adjective instead of a verb