What is the comparative of sad?

What is the comparative of sad?

The ‘comparative’ and ‘superlative’ degree of Sad is Sadder and Saddest. Explanation: An adjective is a ‘part of speech’ that tells us more about a noun and gives attributes to it. For example, lovely, beautiful, graceful are all adjectives. Hence the comparative for ‘sad is sadder’ and ‘superlative is saddest’.

What is the superlative degree of sad?

What Are Comparative And Superlative Adjectives?

positive comparative superlative
sad sadder saddest
happy happier happiest
unusual more unusual most unusual

Can we use that in superlative degree?

We use a superlative adjective to describe the extreme quality of one thing in a group of things. We can use superlative adjectives when talking about three or more things (not two things). A is the biggest….

Long adjectives
RULE: use “most” modern → the most modern expensive → the most expensive

Is more kinder correct?

Kinder is used for a simple comparative or description e.g My friend is kinder than me. I wish I were a kinder person. It is possible to say ‘more kind’, normally to emphasise something e.g. They couldn’t have been more kind.

What is the superlative of hungry?

adjective. /ˈhʌŋɡri/ /ˈhʌŋɡri/ (comparative hungrier, superlative hungriest)

What is the degree of hungry?

Here is the adjective “hungry” in all three degrees of comparison: Lee is hungry. (positive degree) (superlative degree)

Is hungrier grammatically correct?

Grammatically, both forms are “correct”; neither is “incorrect”.

Is Hungry a describing word?

adjective, hun·gri·er, hun·gri·est. having a desire, craving, or need for food; feeling hunger. lacking needful or desirable elements; not fertile; poor: hungry land. marked by a scarcity of food: The depression years were hungry times.