Any time
Open links in new tab
Er Est More Most
This summary was generated by AI from multiple online sources. Find the source links used for this summary under "Based on sources".
Learn more about Bing search results hereOrganizing and summarizing search results for you"More" and "most" are used to form the comparative and superlative of most 2-syllable adjectives. Both "-er" and "-est" and "more" and "most" can be used to form the comparative and superlative of some 2-syllable adjectives, such as clever, common, cruel, gentle, narrow, pleasant, polite, quiet, simple, stupid, and tired. There is no rule about using "more" and "most" versus "-er" and "-est" to express the comparative and superlative, but there are some common conventions.2 Sources
-
Kizdar net |
Kizdar net |
Кыздар Нет
States of Adjective: -er or more, -est or most - Grammar.com
States of Adjectives: -er or more, -est or most - Grammar.com
Comparison of adjectives in English grammar (-er, -est & more, …
‘More’ or ‘-er’? ‘Most’ or ‘-est’? - Grammarphobia
Is it more/most or -er/-est? | K5 Learning
Degrees of comparison (-er/-est or more/most)
– er /-est is used to form the comparative and superlative of 2-syllable adjectives ending in – y: easy – easi er – easi est more / most is used to form the comparative and superlative of most 2-syllable adjectives
- People also ask
Degrees of Comparison Rules and Examples with …
Jun 20, 2023 · Get a thorough understanding of when to use “more,” “most,” “er,” and “est” to form comparisons. and how to construct meaningful and accurate comparative and superlative sentences.
Study Resource: Two-syllable adjectives that can take ‘-er’ / ‘-est ...
Comparison of adjectives in English - Englisch Lernen Online
286. Comparative and Superlative Adjectives With More and Most
Comparison of adjectives in English - Lingbase
Comparative and superlative adjectives | LearnEnglish Teens
Comparatives: -er & -est - The University Writing Center
Membuat Perbandingan Dengan More, Most, -er, dan -est
when to use “more” and “most” - andrea paulsen.communications
Comparison of Adjectives - English Grammar | English4u
Use of “-er” or the word “more” to make comparative forms
States of Adjectives: -er or more, -est or most - Grammar.com
Irregular Comparatives and Superlatives | Don't Add the Suffixes
Adjectives: -er, -est vs. more, most. : r/linguistics - Reddit