Comparative and superlative degrees

Status
Not open for further replies.

Ju

Key Member
Joined
Nov 6, 2006
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Chinese
Home Country
Hong Kong
Current Location
Hong Kong
Are there rules to tell when should we add "er", "est", "more" and "most" for comparative and superlative adjectives?
 
Are there rules [STRIKE]to tell[/STRIKE] for when we should [STRIKE]we[/STRIKE] add "er", "est", "more" and "most" for comparative and superlative adjectives?
See above.
 
Right. More concisely:

- er = the better of two things.

- est = the best of three or more things.​

The trick: Just remember that er is two letters and est is three.

Easy!
 
The general rule is that if an adjective has one or two syllables, you can add -er/-est to the end. If it has three or more syllables, you use more/most + adjective.

hard (1 syllable) > harder/hardest
easy (2 syllables) > easier/easiest
arduous (3 syllables) > more/most arduous
professional (4 syllables) > more/most professional

Bear in mind, though, that it really is a general rule. There are, of course, exceptions.
 
Can I say:

1. Book A is much more interesting than Book B.

2. Exercise 1 is much easier than Exercise 2.
 
Can I say the following?

1. Book A is much more interesting than Book B.

2. Exercise 1 is much easier than Exercise 2.

Yes.

Note my change to the opening of your post. If you just write "Can I say" and follow it with two lines of text, you've got nowhere to put the necessary question mark.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top