词汇 | grammar_british-grammar_comparison-adjectives-bigger-biggest-more-interesting | ||||||||||||||||||||
释义 | Comparison: adjectives (bigger, biggest, more interesting)Comparative and superlative adjectivesComparative adjectivesComparative adjectives compare one person or thing with another and enable us to say whether a person or thing has more or less of a particular quality:
Superlative adjectivesSuperlative adjectives describe one person or thing as having more of a quality than all other people or things in a group:
Comparative or superlative?A comparative compares a person or thing with another person or thing. A superlative compares a person or thing with the whole group of which that person or thing is a member:
When there are just two members in a group, traditionally, we use the comparative. However, in informal situations people often use the superlative:
Comparative and superlative adjectives: formOne-syllable adjectives (big, cold, hot, long, nice, old, tall)To form the comparative, we use the -er suffix with adjectives of one syllable:
To form the superlative, we use the -est suffix with adjectives of one syllable. We normally use the before a superlative adjective:
Spelling of comparatives and superlatives with one-syllable adjectives
Note the pronunciation of these comparatives and superlatives: long/lɒŋ/longer/lɒŋgə(r)/longest/lɒŋgəst/ strong/strɒŋ/stronger/strɒŋgə(r)/strongest/strɒŋgəst/ young/jʌŋ/younger/jʌŋgə(r)/youngest/jʌŋgəst/ One-syllable adjectives which are irregularSome one-syllable adjectives have irregular comparative and superlative forms: bad, worse, worstfar, farther/further, farthest/furthest good, better, bestold, older/elder, oldest/eldest
Warning: We do not use more or most together with an -er or -est ending:
See also: Farther, farthest or further, furthest? Elder, eldest or older, oldest? Two-syllable adjectivesTwo-syllable adjectives ending in -y change y to i and take the -er and -est endings:
Some other two-syllable adjectives (especially those ending in an unstressed vowel sound) can also take the -er and -est endings:
We don’t normally use the -er and -est endings with two-syllable adjectives ending in -ful. Instead, we use more and most/least:
Longer adjectivesAdjectives of three or more syllables form the comparative with more/less and the superlative with most/least:
Comparative adjectives: using much, a lot, far, etc.We can strengthen or emphasise a comparative adjective using words such as much, a lot, far, even or rather, or by using than ever after the adjective:
We can soften a comparative adjective using a little or a bit. A bit is less formal:
or She feelsa bit more confident… (less formal) Comparative adjectives: using thanWe use than when we mention the second person or thing in the comparison. If the second person mentioned takes the form of a personal pronoun, we normally use the object form of the pronoun (me, you, him, her, us, them):
In more formal situations, instead of than + object pronoun, we can use than + subject pronoun + be:
Comparative adjectives: -erand -er, more and moreTo talk about how a person or thing is changing and gaining more of a particular quality, we can use two -er form adjectives connected by and, or we can use more and more before an adjective. We don’t follow such comparisons with than:
Comparative adjectives: the -er, the -er and the more …, the more …If a person or things gains more of a particular quality and this causes a parallel increase of another quality, we can repeat the + a comparative adjective:
Reduced forms after comparativesAfter than, we often don’t repeat subject pronouns with impersonal subjects, or auxiliary verbs with passive voice verbs:
Less and not as/not so with comparativesWe use less with longer adjectives (interesting, beautiful, complicated), but we don’t normally use less with short adjectives of one syllable (big, good, high, small). Instead we use not as … as …, or not so … as … Not as is more common than not so:
Prepositions after superlative adjectivesWe don’t normally use of before a singular name of a place or group after a superlative adjective:
However, we can use of with a plural word referring to a group:
The with superlative adjectivesWhen a superlative adjective is followed by a noun, we normally use the:
In informal situations, we can often omit the after a linking verb (be, seem) or a verb of the senses (look, taste) if there is no noun: [talking about sweaters in a shop]
Other determiners with superlative adjectivesBefore a superlative adjective, we can use a possessive determiner (my, his, their), or the + a number (two, three, first, second), or a possessive determiner + a number:
Emphasising superlative adjectivesWe can make a superlative adjective stronger with by far, easily or of all:
In more formal situations, we can use quite:
To-infinitives after superlative adjectivesWe can use a to-infinitive after a superlative adjective, with a meaning similar to a relative clause with who, which or that:
See also: Relative clauses Comparative adjectives: typical errorsA comparative adjective is followed by than, not that or as:
After a superlative adjective, we don’t normally use of before a singular name of a place or group:
We use the superlative, not the comparative, when we compare more than two people or things:
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