Comparative Adjectives

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Atchan

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When we use adjectives (e.g., old, important) to compare two people or two things, the adjectives have special forms:

a) We add –er to an adjectives that have one-syllable.
b) We use more in front of adjectives that have two or more syllable.

What I want to talk about is syllable, what it means?

I have checked it on the dictionary and gave me this meaning “a single unit of speech, either a whole word or one of the parts into which a word can be separated, usually containing a vowel” but I do still not understand it.

Adjectives with one syllable
Old >>> Older
Cheap >>> Cheaper
Big >>> Bigger
What is one syllable?

And here adjectives with two or more syllable
Famous >>> more famous
Important >>> more important
Interesting >>> more interesting
Can you point to the syllables that are in these words?

I know everything relating to comparative adjectives except syllables which need for explanation.


Thank you in advance.
 
What is one syllable?
You seem to be confusing comparitives with syllables. Old, older, and oldest are ways of comparing things - while each has certain syllables, they are not syllables.

So what do think of this
Cheap >>> Cheaper
Does it has one-syllable? I think two che - ap. I hope that I'm wrong. :)
 
Cheap - er (Two syllables)
Cheap (One syllable)

Get away from the idea that syllables have anything to do with comparsions - they don't.

Establishment: es - tab - lish - ment. Four syllables.
Disestablishing: dis - es- tab - lish - ing. Five syllables
Rather: rath - er or rah - ther. Two syllables

Syllables are about how words are pronounced.
OK my teacher I will get away from this idea because I thought that its necessary. Some English books say its necessary while the others do not pay attention to this rule (as they say). So I will continue my studying.

Thank you for your help
 
When we use adjectives (e.g., old, important) to compare two people or two things, the adjectives have special forms:</p>
a) We add –er to an adjectives that have one-syllable.
b) We use more in front of adjectives that have two or more syllable.
</p>

You're right.
We can't call it a rule, but most of English adjectives follow that pattern.
The syllable is a rather complicated linguistic concept. It won't help you much in your studies. But, it wouldn't hurt to know some things about it: we expect a syllable to have a vowel, and/or one or two consonants that may come before or after the vowel. So a one-syllable word is a word that has at least one vowel.

-Red = r + e + d -----> consonant + vowel + consonant
-old = o + l + d -----> vowel + consonant +consonant

These words are short, so we attach an -er to them for comparison:
-old + er
 
</p>

You're right.
We can't call it a rule, but most of English adjectives follow that pattern.
The syllable is a rather complicated linguistic concept. It won't help you much in your studies. But, it wouldn't hurt to know some things about it: we expect a syllable to have a vowel, and/or one or two consonants that may come before or after the vowel. So a one-syllable word is a word that has at least one vowel.

-Red = r + e + d -----> consonant + vowel + consonant
-old = o + l + d -----> vowel + consonant +consonant

These words are short, so we attach an -er to them for comparison:
-old + er
Its nice to learn it and will not hurt us as a student, but it really confuses most students. In the first I thought its a rule but know I realized that its a rubbish.

As the teacher Gillnetter said
"Get away from the idea that syllables have anything to do with comparsions - they don't".

Really its nice words.
 
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