Fat Difficult Difficult: He of An or That A In, ,, or
Fat Difficult Difficult: He of An or That A In, ,, or
Fat Difficult Difficult: He of An or That A In, ,, or
Grammar
Comparative adjectives: -erand -er, more and moreTo talk about how a
person or thing is changing and gaining more of a particular quality, we can use
two -er form adjectives connected by and, or we can use more and more before
an adjective. We don’t follow such comparisons with than: …
Comparative adjectives: the -er, the -er and the more …, the more …If a
person or things gains more of a particular quality and this causes a parallel
increase of another quality, we can repeat the + a comparative adjective: …
Less and not as/not so with comparativesWe use less with longer adjectives
(interesting, beautiful, complicated), but we don’t normally use less with short
adjectives of one syllable (big, good, high, small). Instead we use not as … as
…, or not so … as … Not as is more common than not so: …
Adverbs with more and mostAdverbs with two or more syllables form the
comparative and superlative with more and most: …
Well and badlyThe adverb well has the same comparative and superlative
forms as the adjective good (better, best). The adverb badly has the
comparative and superlative forms worse, worst: …
Comparative adverbs: using thanWhen we mention the second person or
thing in the comparison, we use than. We do not use that or as. If the second
person mentioned takes the form of a personal pronoun, we normally use the
object form of the pronoun (me, you, him, her, us, them):…
comparativeadjective
UK /kəmˈpær.ə.tɪv/ US /kəmˈper.ə.t̬ ɪv/
comparative adjective (EXAMINING DIFFERENCES)
Grammar
Comparative adjectives: -erand -er, more and moreTo talk about how a
person or thing is changing and gaining more of a particular quality, we can use
two -er form adjectives connected by and, or we can use more and more before
an adjective. We don’t follow such comparisons with than: …
Comparative adjectives: the -er, the -er and the more …, the more …If a
person or things gains more of a particular quality and this causes a parallel
increase of another quality, we can repeat the + a comparative adjective: …
Less and not as/not so with comparativesWe use less with longer adjectives
(interesting, beautiful, complicated), but we don’t normally use less with short
adjectives of one syllable (big, good, high, small). Instead we use not as … as
…, or not so … as … Not as is more common than not so: …
Adverbs with more and mostAdverbs with two or more syllables form the
comparative and superlative with more and most: …
Well and badlyThe adverb well has the same comparative and superlative
forms as the adjective good (better, best). The adverb badly has the
comparative and superlative forms worse, worst: …
Inglés
Americano
Ejemplos
"comparative" en inglés americano
comparativenoun [C]
US /kəmˈpær·ət̬ ·ɪv/
comparative noun [ C ] (GRAMMAR)
US /kəmˈpær·ət̬ ·ɪv/
comparative adjective [ not gradable ] (EXAMINING DIFFERENCES)