CHOOSE THE CORRECT COMPARATIVE FORM 1. In Canada, January is ______ than March. a. better b. colder c. higher d. easier 2. I think that a good health is ________ than money. a. more expensive b. more important c. more difficult d. more dangerous 3. I can’t carry my suitcase. It’s much ______ than yours. a. colder b. heavier c. higher d. thinner 4. I can afford to buy a new bike but not a new car. A car is ______ than a bike. a. more difficult b. more expensive c. more crowded d. more important 5. You look _______ than the last time I saw you. Have you lost weight? a. higher b. thinner c. easier d. colder 6. I couldn’t get a seat in the restaurant. It was _______ than usual. a. higher b. more crowded c. thinner d. badder 7. Mountains are __________ than hills. a. more difficult b. higher c. easier d. more important 8. He got a very good mark on his exam. The exam was _______ than he had expected. a. difficulter b. easier c. more dangerous d. higher 9. There is a lot of crime in the big cities. They are _______ than the small town where I live. a. more difficult b. more dangerous c. more crowded d. heavier 10. I don’t understand this lesson. It is ______ than the last one we did. a. worse b. more difficult c. more dangerous d. more crowded profavor ayuda es para hoy a las 10 am
Respuestas a la pregunta
Respuesta:Comparative 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:
Josh is taller than his sister.
I’m more interested in music than sport.
Big cars that use a lot of petrol are less popular now than twenty years ago.
Superlative adjectives
Superlative adjectives describe one person or thing as having more of a quality than all other people or things in a group:
The ‘Silver Arrow’ will be the fastest train in the world when it is built.
The most frightening film I’ve ever seen was Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘Psycho’.
What is the least expensive way of travelling in Japan?
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:
Joe’s older than Mike. (comparing one person with another)
Sheila is the youngest girl in the family. (comparing one person with the whole group she belongs to)
When there are just two members in a group, traditionally, we use the comparative. However, in informal situations people often use the superlative:
Who is younger, Rowan or Tony? (traditional usage)
Jan and Barbara are both tall, but Jan’s the tallest. (more informal)
Comparative and superlative adjectives: form
One-syllable adjectives (big, cold, hot, long, nice, old, tall)
To form the comparative, we use the -er suffix with adjectives of one syllable:
It’s colder today than yesterday.
It was a longer holiday than the one we had last year.
Sasha is older than Mark.
To form the superlative, we use the -est suffix with adjectives of one syllable. We normally use the before a superlative adjective:
I think that’s the biggest apple I’ve ever seen!
At one time, the Empire State building in New York was the tallest building in the world.
They have three boys. Richard is the oldest and Simon is the youngest.
Spelling of comparatives and superlatives with one-syllable adjectives
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