Credit: Teacher Jocelyn
One-syllable adjectives | old wise | COMPARATIVE older wiser | SUPERLATIVE the oldest the wisest | For more one-syllable adjectives, -er and -est are added. |
Two-syllable adjectives | famous pleasant | more famous more pleasant | the most famous the most pleasant | For more two-syllable adjectives, more and most are used. |
busy pretty | busier prettier | the busiest the prettiest | -Er and -est are used with two-syllable adjectives that end in -y. The -y is changed to -i. | |
clever gentle friendly | cleverer more clever gentler more gentle friendlier more friendly | the cleverest the most clever the gentlest the most gentle the friendliest the most friendly | Some two-syllable adjectives use either -er/-est or more/most: able, angry, clever, common, cruel, friendly, gentle, handsome, narrow, pleasant, polite, quiet, simple, sour. | |
Adjectives with three or more syllables | important fascinating | more important more fascinating | the most important the most fascinating | More and most are used with long adjectives. |
Irregular adjectives | good bad | better worse | the best the worst | Good and bad have irregular comparative and superlative forms. |
Both farther and further are used to compare physical distances: I walked farther/further than my friend did. Further (but not farther) can also mean “additional”: I need further information. Source: Fundamental of English Grammar 3rd Edition - Betty Azar. |
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