Results 1 to 6 of 6
Like Tree6Likes
  • 1 Post By marin123
  • 1 Post By emsr2d2
  • 1 Post By marin123
  • 1 Post By emsr2d2
  • 1 Post By TheParser
  • 1 Post By marin123

Thread: degrees of comparison

  1. #1
    marin123 is offline Newbie
    • Member Info
      • Member Type:
      • Student or Learner
      • Native Language:
      • Russian
      • Home Country:
      • Russian Federation
      • Current Location:
      • Russian Federation
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    26

    Default degrees of comparison

    My task was to write the initial form of adjectives "More lighter" and "Best higher".

    Well, you know, like the initial form of "better" is "good".

    But here, I can't understand, can they be used, such phrases "more lighter" and "best higher"? And if such phrases REALLY EXIST, may be their initial forms are "much light" and "good high"?

    I',m confused. May be it is just a typing mistake. And there are just 4 words instead of 2 phrases?
    TheParser likes this.

  2. #2
    emsr2d2 is offline VIP Member
    • Member Info
      • Member Type:
      • English Teacher
      • Native Language:
      • British English
      • Home Country:
      • UK
      • Current Location:
      • UK
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Posts
    9,024
    Teacher

    Default Re: degrees of comparison

    Quote Originally Posted by marin123 View Post
    My task was to write the initial form of adjectives "More lighter" and "Best higher".

    Well, you know, like the initial form of "better" is "good".

    But here, I can't understand, can they be used, such phrases "more lighter" and "best higher"? And if such phrases REALLY EXIST, may be their initial forms are "much light" and "good high"?

    I',m confused. May be it is just a typing mistake. And there are just 4 words instead of 2 phrases?
    "More lighter" and "best higher" aren't used in natural English. I think you're probably right that they want you to find the initial form of:

    1 - more
    2 - lighter
    3 - best
    4 - higher

    However, given the example you gave (initial form of "better" is "good") then I'm not sure what they expect you to do with #1 and #3.

    As a side thought, I can think of one example where "best" and "higher" would appear next to each other but not as a two-word phrase.
    TheParser likes this.

  3. #3
    marin123 is offline Newbie
    • Member Info
      • Member Type:
      • Student or Learner
      • Native Language:
      • Russian
      • Home Country:
      • Russian Federation
      • Current Location:
      • Russian Federation
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    26
    Threadstarter / Original Poster

    Default Re: degrees of comparison

    I also believe that there can't be such phrases at all. That's why I'm asking.
    TheParser likes this.

  4. #4
    emsr2d2 is offline VIP Member
    • Member Info
      • Member Type:
      • English Teacher
      • Native Language:
      • British English
      • Home Country:
      • UK
      • Current Location:
      • UK
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Posts
    9,024
    Teacher

    Default Re: degrees of comparison

    I think you need to go back to whoever gave you this task, and ask them for clarification. If they say that "more lighter" and "best higher" are acceptable English phrases, you can tell them that is incorrect (or at least that this native speaker believes that it's incorrect!)
    TheParser likes this.

  5. #5
    TheParser is offline Key Member
    • Member Info
      • Member Type:
      • Other
      • Native Language:
      • English
      • Home Country:
      • United States
      • Current Location:
      • United States
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Posts
    4,348

    Default Re: degrees of comparison

    [QUOTE=marin123;841718]


    NOT A TEACHER


    (1) As the teacher told us, the so-called "double comparative" and the so-called

    "double superlative" are NOT considered "good" English in 2012.

    (2) I have read that they were OK back in the days of Shakespeare (more than

    400 years ago). But today we do NOT say:

    Tom is more taller than Joe.

    This is the most best website on the Web.
    stanislaw.masny likes this.

  6. #6
    marin123 is offline Newbie
    • Member Info
      • Member Type:
      • Student or Learner
      • Native Language:
      • Russian
      • Home Country:
      • Russian Federation
      • Current Location:
      • Russian Federation
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    26
    Threadstarter / Original Poster

    Default Re: degrees of comparison

    Thank you very much for your help.
    These phrases must be just a mistake, and there are separate words, not phrases.
    TheParser likes this.

Similar Threads

  1. [Grammar] in/to various degrees
    By Csika in forum Ask a Teacher
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 25-Oct-2010, 15:04
  2. [Grammar] What is correct? degrees Celsius or Celsius degrees
    By dennietrieu in forum Ask a Teacher
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 25-Aug-2010, 10:25
  3. Zero degrees?
    By Ismaeltohari in forum Ask a Teacher
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 14-Nov-2008, 09:09
  4. degrees of comparison
    By Clark in forum Ask a Teacher
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 01-Nov-2008, 20:29
  5. Three forms or degrees of a comparison?
    By Unregistered in forum Ask a Teacher
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 12-May-2008, 13:06

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0