0% found this document useful (0 votes)
159 views3 pages

Comparative and Superlative Guide

This document provides instructions on how to compare things using comparative and superlative forms in English. It discusses the structures for comparing equality, inferiority, and superiority. It also covers irregular forms, pronouns with comparatives, grading comparisons, and using articles with superlatives. Key points include using "-er" for comparatives and "-est" for superlatives with short words, and "more"/"most" with multi-syllable words. Pronouns in comparisons can take the forms of "than me/I am/I".

Uploaded by

Frety Andila
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
159 views3 pages

Comparative and Superlative Guide

This document provides instructions on how to compare things using comparative and superlative forms in English. It discusses the structures for comparing equality, inferiority, and superiority. It also covers irregular forms, pronouns with comparatives, grading comparisons, and using articles with superlatives. Key points include using "-er" for comparatives and "-est" for superlatives with short words, and "more"/"most" with multi-syllable words. Pronouns in comparisons can take the forms of "than me/I am/I".

Uploaded by

Frety Andila
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

How to compare things

 COMPARISON OF EQUALITY

Affirmative: AS - AS
      My son is as tall as me 
Negative: NOT SO - AS  (also: not as - as)
      My son isn’t so tall as me / My son isn’t as tall as me

 COMPARISON OF INFERIORITY

LESS - THAN
      I’m less fat than last summer 
      The film was less interesting than what I expected 

 COMPARISON OF SUPERIORITY AND SUPERLATIVE

When comparing two things we use the comparative:

      John is taller than Mark

When comparing more than two things, we use the superlative:

      John is the tallest in his family


      Mount Everest is the highest mountain in the world

 short words (1 syllable):

Comparatives add -ER and superlatives add -EST


     old  older  oldest
     fast  faster  fastest
Words ending in -e drop it
     late  later  latest
     fine  finer  finest
Words ending in -y change it to -i
     shy  shier  shiest
Words ending in one single syllable followed by one single consonant, double the final
consonant when the vowel is stressed: -1V+1C --> -CC
     fat  fatter  fattest
     slim  slimmer  slimmest
 
 long words (3 or more syllables):

They use MORE for the comparative and THE MOST for the superlative.


 
     intelligent  more intelligent  the most intelligent
 
 2-syllable words:

They can use both forms, but we prefer More/the Most


     
     handsome  more handsome the most handsome
     cheerful  more cheerful  the most cheerful
 
Nevertheless, words ending in -y and some adjectives such as: quiet, clever y narrow usually
take -er/-est
     easy  easier   the easiest
     happy  happier  the happiest
     clever  cleverer   the cleverest 
 
But if they end in -ly, they use more/most (except: early)
     quickly  more quickly  the most quickly
     slowly  more slowly  the most slowly
     early  earlier  the earliest
 
If you find the two-syllable words confusing, it is usually safe to say that when in doubt, you can
always use more/most.

 
 PRONOUNS WITH COMPARATIVES

 If the second part of the comparison is a personal pronoun, there are three possibilities:
     She's older than me     (the most common construction in informal English)
     She's older than I am   (the most common in formal English)
     She's older than I         (very formal and rarely used, so you can forget about it) 

   
 SUPERLATIVE SENTENCES

Don't forget to use the article with superlatives: the


     Tommy is the tallest person I know
 
When comparing with a group, use the preposition IN (rarely "of")
     That's the highest building in the world
     You have the nicest room in the hotel
     The boss is the most important person in the company
     I'm the youngest in my family
 
But we can use the preposition OF before plurals and time expresions
     He’s the biggest one of the boys
     Kevin is the most handsome of them
     This is the best day of my life
     July is usually the hottest month of the year

  
 GRADING

- my friend is tall  --> my friend is taller than me


- my friend is very tall  --> my friend is much taller than me
- my friend is a bit tall --> my friend is a bit taller than me
- my friend is very very very tall --> my friend is by far the tallest
 
- My friend is much less tall than me 
- my friend is by far the tallest in class  (much much taller than the rest)
- my friend is much more intelligent than John
- my girl-friend is by far the most wonderful girl in the world

 To express that the quality is increasing, you use more and more

- It's getting darker and darker


- You are becoming more and more stupid

 
 Irregular forms

     good/well    better     best


     bad/badly    worse    worst
     far  further/farther    furthest/farthest

Source: https://www.multimedia-english.com/grammar/how-to-compare-things-45

You might also like