This document lists the comparative and superlative forms of various adjectives in English. It provides the -er and -est endings to form the comparative and superlative of one-syllable adjectives and uses "more" and "most" with multisyllabic adjectives. The list ranges from adjectives like "angry" to "young" and shows how to make comparisons in degree for hundreds of English adjectives.
This document lists the comparative and superlative forms of various adjectives in English. It provides the -er and -est endings to form the comparative and superlative of one-syllable adjectives and uses "more" and "most" with multisyllabic adjectives. The list ranges from adjectives like "angry" to "young" and shows how to make comparisons in degree for hundreds of English adjectives.
This document lists the comparative and superlative forms of various adjectives in English. It provides the -er and -est endings to form the comparative and superlative of one-syllable adjectives and uses "more" and "most" with multisyllabic adjectives. The list ranges from adjectives like "angry" to "young" and shows how to make comparisons in degree for hundreds of English adjectives.
This document lists the comparative and superlative forms of various adjectives in English. It provides the -er and -est endings to form the comparative and superlative of one-syllable adjectives and uses "more" and "most" with multisyllabic adjectives. The list ranges from adjectives like "angry" to "young" and shows how to make comparisons in degree for hundreds of English adjectives.
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The text provides a comprehensive list of English adjectives and their comparative and superlative forms.
Some examples of adjectives that show comparison from the text include: angry/angrier/angriest, bad/worse/worst, big/bigger/biggest, bitter/bitterer/bitterest.
The text organizes adjectives into their positive, comparative, and superlative forms. The comparative form is used to compare two items, and the superlative form is used to compare three or more items.