Comparative & Superlative Adjectives and Adverbs
At the A2 level, you should be able to use comparative and superlative forms like “bigger,” “the best,” “faster,” and “most slowly.” A free English grammar test with clear rules, examples, and practice questions.
Exercises & Summary
Comparative and Superlative Adjectives Exercises and Adverbs
Hey, everyone! Today, we’re going to learn how to use adjectives and adverbs in their comparative and superlative forms. These help us see how people, things, or actions are different from each other. It’s simple and very helpful for everyday English. Let’s get started!
1. What Are They?
- Adjectives describe nouns (people, things, places).
- Example: big, small, fast, beautiful
- Comparative: We use it to compare two things.
- Example: My bag is bigger than your bag.
- Superlative: We use it to compare three or more things. It shows the “most” or “least”.
- Example: This is the biggest bag in the shop.
We do the same with adverbs (they describe verbs, how we do something).
- Example: quickly, slowly, well
2. How to Form Comparative and Superlative (Rules for A2)
A. Short words (one syllable)
- Comparative → add -er
- Superlative → add -est
| Adjective/Adverb | Comparative | Superlative | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|---|
| tall | taller | tallest | Tom is taller than Anna. Anna is the tallest in class. |
| fast | faster | fastest | I run faster than you. He runs the fastest. |
| quick | quicker | quickest | She speaks quicker now. She speaks the quickest. |
B. Words ending in -e
- Add -r for comparative
- Add -st for superlative
| nice → nicer → nicest | close → closer → closest |
C. Words ending in consonant + y (like happy, easy)
- Change y → i, then add -er / -est
| happy → happier → happiest | easy → easier → easiest |
D. Words with two syllables or more (beautiful, carefully, etc.)
- Use more (comparative) and most (superlative)
- For negative meaning: less and least
| Adjective/Adverb | Comparative | Superlative |
|---|---|---|
| beautiful | more beautiful | most beautiful |
| carefully | more carefully | most carefully |
| expensive | less expensive | least expensive |
E. Irregular ones (you just remember them!)
| Adjective/Adverb | Comparative | Superlative |
|---|---|---|
| good / well | better | best |
| bad / badly | worse | worst |
| far | farther/further | farthest/furthest |
| little | less | least |
| many / much | more | most |
3. Important Grammar Points
- Always use than after comparative when you say the second thing.
Correct: My car is faster than your car.
Incorrect: My car is faster your car. - Use the before superlative.
Correct: She is the smartest student.
Incorrect: She is smartest student. - We can use superlative with in (groups/places) or of (time/people).
- This is the coldest day of the year.
- He is the tallest in our family.
4. Quick Examples in Sentences
- Adjectives:
- English is easier than math.
- This phone is more modern than my old one.
- Yesterday was the hottest day of summer!
- Adverbs:
- She sings better than me.
- He drives more carefully than his brother.
- My grandma tells stories the most interestingly.