Monday, 21 February 2011

Comparatives and Superlatives

written by Deirdre McCarthy, York Language Tuition, TEFL & CELTA qualified English Tutor based in York.
http://www.yorklanguagetuition.co.uk

What are they?

We use comparatives to compare two people, places or things  that are different: John is taller than Harry;
Harry’s more patient than John; our last house was smaller than this house.
We use superlatives to compare three or more people, places or things.
John is the tallest boy in his class; this is the biggest house I have ever lived in; Libya has the highest recorded
temperature in the world.
How we use comparative and superlatives in English – what are the rules for spelling and form.
The table below shows some of the rules and a couple of exceptions to these rules – there are always
exceptions in English! Then there are the irregular forms – some of these are shown at the end in pink. 
                                                                                                                                                                                               
type of adjective
spelling rule
comparative    superlative
comparative
superlative
Most 1-syllable adjectives
add –er             add -est
older        brighter
BUT  dry - drier
richest        oldest
BUT dry - driest
1-syllable adjective ending
In -e
add –r               add -st
nicer         safer
nicest        safest
1-syllableadjectives ending in consonant + vowel + consonant
double the last consonant
and add
-er                       -est
bigger      fatter
wetter
BUT new - newer
biggest     thinnest
wettest
BUT new - newest
2-syllable adjectives ending in –y
Replace –y with –i and add
  -er                      -est
easier      noisier
windier   heavier
happiest    funniest
heaviest     prettiest
2-syllable adjectives not ending in -y
put more        put most
before the adjective
more mature
more patient
most boring
most patient
Adjectives with 3 syllables or more
put more        put most
before the adjective
more aggressive
more organised
most popular
most attractive

Irregular adjectives:  
good, better, best
bad, worse, worst
far, further/farther, furthest/farthest


I think it’s interesting to consider why some of these rules apply.  For instance, why do we say “more aggressive” andmost attractive” instead of aggressive and attractivest. In this instance it’s simply about how it sounds. When there are more than 3 syllables, to just add –er or –est for the comparative or superlative would sound clumsy and awkward.


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1 comment:

  1. I never thought about the actual "rules"-especially related to syllables. Interesting read.

    ReplyDelete