Actually, it was a question of a workbook to transform a comparative to a superlative as in the following.
ex)...I'm so lucky to have a college roommate like Sue. We've only know each other a few months,....For example, I thought I was the world's biggest coffee fan, but I've seen no one enjoy coffee more than she does, including me! Also, we both enjoy cooking, and nobody in the dorm can cook better than we do...
Q. Transform the underlined below.
= We can cook _best_ in the dorm
I doubted if I can add "the" here, so I looked up in the dictionary, and the dictonary says "best" not "the best" is the superlative of "well".
Did it explicitly say that "the best" was not the superlative, or did it just list "best"?
You can say "We cook the best in the dorm" if the context is understood.
But judging from what you said, when there is nothing to compare in the given situation of a sentence, you can use only "best" as in "We cook well on a campfire, we cook better in a kitchen, but we cook best in the dorm"
Why are you saying there's nothing to compare? Are you saying you don't detect a comparison in the above?
and when there is something to compare as in "Of all the students in the dorm, we cook [the] best." you can either use "the" or not. Right?