Questions tagged [comparatives]

The form of an adjective or adverb used to compare two or more things. English comparatives are formed with the suffixes -er/-est or the words more/most.

Comparatives are the forms of an adjective or adverb which are used to compare the quality of two or more things. There are two comparative forms in English: the comparative which compares exactly two things, and the superlative which compares three or more things. Strictly speaking the term comparative only refers to the second degree, but the term comparatives as an umbrella term is used for both the comparative and the superlative.

English has two ways of forming comparatives. Synthetic comparatives are formed by adding the suffixes -er and -est to the base adjective:

A bright day

A brighter day (Comparative)

The brightest day (Superlative)

Analytic comparatives are formed by adding the word more or most before the adjective:

A miserable day

A more miserable day (Comparative)

The most miserable day (Superlative)

There is no strict rule which determines which adjectives are formed with the analytic comparative and which use the synthetic comparative. In general, native Germanic adjectives which are monosyllables or which end in -y use the synthetic comparative. Latinate adjectives, other borrowed adjectives, neologisms, and polysyllabic adjectives usually use the analytic comparative.

Adverbs also form comparatives, but they only use the analytic comparative:

A closely watched match

A more closely watched match

The most closely watched match

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"Much more easy" versus "much easier"

My mom and I are having a dispute on much more easy versus much easier. For example, consider the sentence: It's [much more easy]/[much easier] to do action X than action Y. I say that much easier is correct and that much more easy is…
BlackJack
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"as" or "than" in comparative constructions

Is it usually as or than that is used in such constructions as the following? Twice as many men said they liked action movies as/than comedies. Twice as many customers ordered pizza as/than Caesar Salad. There are very controversial answers on…
anna299
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two times or twice

In the 1980’s the rate of increase of the minority population of the United States was nearly twice as fast as it was in the 1970’s. In the 1980’s the rate of increase of the minority population of the United States was nearly twice what it was in…
Umesh
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"Much more simple" or "much more simpler"

Which is the correct sentence? It is much more simple to resolve the memory leak issues. It is much more simpler to resolve the memory leak issues.
dexterous
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"Prefer tea to/over coffee"

Possible Duplicate: Which is correct: “prefer X to Y” or “prefer X over Y”? Which is correct? I prefer tea to coffee. I prefer tea over coffee.
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Justification of "more perfect"

I've just read this interesting article. We were being constantly told back in school years that we couldn't use "more" to modify "perfect". I kept feeling guilty using "more perfect" until I read the following idea from the article: Nothing is…
Terry Li
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Why is it unnatural to say "He is as clever as rude"?

(1) He is more clever than rude. (2) ??He is as clever as rude. I've learned (1) is natural and that (2) isn't. (1) means "He is clever rather than rude". Then, why can't (2) mean (2b)? (2b) He is clever as he is rude. In other words, why is (2)…
JK2
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Illogical comparative

I have a little problem of understanding how to pick the preposition of "at" ,"of" or "in" in Illogical comparative : e.g. The climate in the north is colder than that of the south. Why do we us "of" the south instead of "in" the south. I am…
malianto
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Can I use "lighterweight"?

The word "lightweight" simply means, "relatively light in weight." If I want to compare two lightweight objects, can I say: Is A lighterweight than B? Dictionaries don't seem to accept this as a word but would a native speaker be confused or…
MrHen
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Can you ever drop the first ‘as’ in “as . . . as” constructions?

I have wondered if dropping the first as is permissible and grammatical while using comparison: Ian Bell was organised and elegant as ever, prospering with several uppercuts over the slips. I believe as organized and elegant as ever is correct,…
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Omitted words in a comparison

The moon was smaller than yesterday. Is this correct, and the "how large it was" was just omitted and implied, as in The moon was smaller than (how large it was) yesterday. or is this a faulty comparison, comparing something, "the moon," and an…
kalaracey
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What do "the more" and "the less" modify in "The more our knowledge of things is certain and particular, the less it is possible for us to feign"?

The following is an excerpt from The Young Spinoza: A Metaphysician in the Making. (1) The more our knowledge of things is certain and particular, the less it is possible for us to feign; What do the more and the less modify in this sentence? I…
Aki
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comparative adjectives without reference to another term

The fact that children's ideas about science form part of a larger framework of ideas mean that it is easier to change them. (This sentence is Question 4 from Link I found the similar questions to this. Link However, I still have difficulties to…
Choe
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"I have more bikes and cars than him"

I have more bikes and cars than him. Gotham has more traffic lights and large roads than Paris. Are these right or wrong? Note: I didn't compare the size of their roads. I compared the number of their large roads.
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Usage of comparative with a set of adjectives

Today I heard in a video a phrase that puzzled me a bit, specifically "...a more just and fair system..." My previous understanding is that it should had been "fairer and juster" but now I have deep doubts having seen several similar combinations…
Román
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