Grammar Tips & Articles »

Positive, Comparative, Superlative

This Grammar.com article is about Positive, Comparative, Superlative — enjoy your reading!


2:03 min read
27,322 Views
  Ed Good  —  Grammar Tips
Font size:

Postive, Comparative, Superlative - Good, Better, Best

Recall how we defined nouns as words capable of having plurals and possessive endings. Adjectives (and their first cousin, the adverb) also have a feature that distinguishes them. They come in three states. First, the raw adjective—in its positive state—merely describes the noun modified; it doesn’t care about how this particular person or thing stacks up against other members of the same noun class.

Comparative and Superlative

The States of Adjectives

Forming the comparatives and superlatives of adjectives gets a bit tricky. You have two options. Either you can add the ending ‑er to form the comparative and ‑est to form the superlative, or you can put more before the adjective to form the comparative and most to form the superlative.

If I hand you a hot plate, the adjective hot describes the positive state of the plate and cares not one whit about how the plate compares in temperature with other hot plates. In its second state, however, the adjective wants to show that this thing or person has more of the trait it expresses than other things or people in the same noun class. The adjective has a comparative form to express this condition.

Thus, if I hand you a hotter plate, you start to worry about taking hold without a hot pad or glove.

And in its third state, the adjective sticks its neck out and boasts that this particular thing or person has the most of the trait it expresses. The adjective uses its superlative state for this ultimate in brags. So you would probably refuse to pick up the hottest plate.

Thus, take the adjective fast. He is a fast runner. To show that he’s a better runner than the next guy, we say, He is a faster runner. And if he always wins the race, we say, He is the fastest runner of all.

But consider the adjective difficult. We would say, This was a difficult test. But we would not say, This was a difficulter test. Instead, we’d say, This was a more difficult test. We wouldn’t say, This was the difficultest test of all. Instead, we’d say, This was the most difficult test of all.

Hard Copy

You may download our entire discussion of the Parts of Speech. Simply download the Grammar eBook Understanding the Parts of Speech.

 

Previous: Adjectives - Words That Describe

Next: States of Adjectives: -er or more, -est or most

Rate this article:

Have a discussion about this article with the community:

1 Comment
  • Нурсултан Адишов
    Нурсултан Адишов
    Black
    LikeReply8 years ago

Citation

Use the citation below to add this article to your bibliography:

Style:MLAChicagoAPA

"Positive, Comparative, Superlative." Grammar.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 21 Nov. 2024. <https://www.grammar.com/positive-comparative-superlative>.

Free, no signup required:

Add to Chrome

Check your text and writing for style, spelling and grammar problems everywhere on the web!

Free, no signup required:

Add to Firefox

Check your text and writing for style, spelling and grammar problems everywhere on the web!

Free Writing Tool:

Instant
Grammar Checker

Improve your grammar, vocabulary, style, and writing — all for FREE!


Quiz

Are you a grammar master?

»
Choose the sentence with correct use of the possessive pronoun:
A This book is hers, not yours.
B Our house is bigger than their.
C They are going on vacation with we.
D He gave the gift to she.

Improve your writing now:

Download Grammar eBooks

It’s now more important than ever to develop a powerful writing style. After all, most communication takes place in reports, emails, and instant messages.