Here is the completed table of adjectives in their positive, comparative, and superlative forms. Adjective Degrees of Comparison
| Positive (1st column) | Comparative (2nd column) | Superlative (3rd column) |
|---|---|---|
| 1) short | shorter | the shortest |
| 2) big | bigger | the biggest |
| 3) nice | nicer | the nicest |
| 4) clever | funnier | the funniest |
| 5) funny | cleverer | the cleverest |
| 6) large | smaller | the smallest |
| 7) small | larger | the largest |
| 8) hungry | hungrier | the hungriest |
| 9) fine | finer | the finest |
| 10) silly | sharper | the sharpest |
| 11) sharp | sillier | the silliest |
Grammar Rules Applied:
- One-syllable words: Add -er for comparative and -est for superlative (e.g., short shorter). CVC (Consonant-Vowel-Consonant): Double the final consonant (e.g., big bigger). Ending in -e: Only add -r or -st (e.g., nice nicer). Ending in -y: Change -y to -i before adding the suffix (e.g., funny funnier).
Would you like me to create a few practice sentences using these words to help you remember how to use them in context?
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