The document provides information on forming comparative and superlative adjectives in English. For one-syllable adjectives, the comparative form typically ends in "-er" and the superlative in "-est". For adjectives of two or more syllables, the comparative usually uses "more" and the superlative "most" before the base adjective form. Examples of common one and multi-syllable adjectives and their comparative and superlative forms are listed.
The document provides information on forming comparative and superlative adjectives in English. For one-syllable adjectives, the comparative form typically ends in "-er" and the superlative in "-est". For adjectives of two or more syllables, the comparative usually uses "more" and the superlative "most" before the base adjective form. Examples of common one and multi-syllable adjectives and their comparative and superlative forms are listed.
The document provides information on forming comparative and superlative adjectives in English. For one-syllable adjectives, the comparative form typically ends in "-er" and the superlative in "-est". For adjectives of two or more syllables, the comparative usually uses "more" and the superlative "most" before the base adjective form. Examples of common one and multi-syllable adjectives and their comparative and superlative forms are listed.
The document provides information on forming comparative and superlative adjectives in English. For one-syllable adjectives, the comparative form typically ends in "-er" and the superlative in "-est". For adjectives of two or more syllables, the comparative usually uses "more" and the superlative "most" before the base adjective form. Examples of common one and multi-syllable adjectives and their comparative and superlative forms are listed.