Adjectives: comparative and superlative forms

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comparative and superlative formation in English

Transcript of Adjectives: comparative and superlative forms

Adjectives:comparative

and superlative formsby Pepa

Mut

1-Adjectives: definition

• Adjectives are words used to describe or give more information about a noun (a tall man). They describe attributes of nouns. Words like green, hungry, impossible, which are used when we describe people, things, events, are adjectives. They are used in connection with nouns and pronouns: a green apple she’s hungry

2-Adjective orderAccording to their meaning adjectives follow this order:

1-opinion2-temperature3-shape-size-height-length-built4-age5-design -colour6-type7-origin8-material

• An attractive tall well-built blond Spanish man.

• She’s got long curly fair hair.• He’s got short wavy dark hair. • A warm large old dark Russian

wooden house.

3-Comparison degrees:• Positive form: tall• Comparative form: taller than, as tall as…• Superlative form: the tallest

4-Comparative and Superlative formation:We use –er than / the –est for:

• Short adjectives (one syllable): cheap, cheaper than, the cheapest

• Two-syllable adjectives ending in -y:pretty, prettier, the prettiest

-most of two-syllable adjectives can take both kinds of comparison (-er, more…)

• longer adjectives: intelligent, more intelligent than, the most intelligent

• two-syllable adjectives ending in –ful, -ous: more doubtful / numerous,

• -adjectives of participle form:tiring, wounded.

• Adverbs that end in –ly:more slowlyYou can use –er / more… with some two-syllable adjectives:

quieter / more quiet simpler / more simplecleverer / more clevernarrower / more narrow

5-Comparative and Superlative formation:We use more than / the most… for:

6-Spelling

• Adjectives ending in a single short vowel followed by a single consonant double the final consonant: big, bigger

• Adjectives ending in mute –e drop it:brave, braver

• 2-syllable adjectives ending–y change it to –i:funny, funnier

-We can use both farther/further with distance: the station is further / farther than I thought. Further but not farther can also mean “more” or “additional”.-The comparative of old is older, but we can use elder when talking about people in a family (my elder brother / sister / cousin). We do not say “somebody is elder than me” we use older than.

Adj Comp Sup Adj Comp Sup

Good Better The best Little less The leastBad Worse The worst Much/

manyMore The most

far FurtherFarther

The f(u)arthest

old O(e)lder The (e)oldest

7-Irregular comparisons

8-Equality• as…as, not as… as:

Peter is as tall as Jack. I’m not as tall as my sister.This cow is as big as an elephant.

9-Too /enough

My soup is too hot.• Too + adjectiveMy soup isn’t cold enough.

• Not +Adjective + enough