Comparative And Superlative Adverbs
With
adverbs ending in -ly, you must use more to form
the comparative, and most to form the superlative.
|
Adverb
|
Comparative
|
Superlative
|
|
quietly
|
more quietly
|
most quietly
|
|
slowly
|
more slowly
|
most slowly
|
|
seriously
|
more seriously
|
most seriously
|
EXAMPLES
- The teacher spoke more
slowly to help us to understand.
- Could you sing more quietly please?
With short
adverbs that do not end in -ly comparative and superlative
forms are identical to adjectives: add -er to form the
comparative and -est to form the superlative. If the adverb
ends in e, remove it before adding the ending.
|
Adverb
|
Comparative
|
Superlative
|
|
hard
|
harder
|
hardest
|
|
fast
|
faster
|
fastest
|
|
late
|
later
|
latest
|
EXAMPLES
- Jim works harder than
his brother.
- Everyone in the race ran fast,
but John ran the fastest of all.
Some
adverbs have irregular comparative and superlative forms.
|
Adverb
|
Comparative
|
Superlative
|
|
badly
|
worse
|
worst
|
|
far
|
farther/further
|
farthest/furthest
|
|
little
|
less
|
least
|
|
well
|
better
|
best
|
EXAMPLES
- The little boy ran farther than
his friends.
- You're driving worse today
than yesterday !
- He played the best of
any player.
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