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THE COMPARISON OF ADJECTIVES

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Title: THE COMPARISON OF ADJECTIVES


1
THE COMPARISON OF ADJECTIVES
  • Lets learn something new!

2
The comparison is used
  • when we compare two people or things.
  • The easiest rule is add the ending er to
    one-syllable words and to two syllable words
    ending in y, e.g.
  • Fast faster
  • Easy easier
  • Big - bigger

3
In sentences
  • Comparisons involve at least two people or two
    things. We use than before the second part of the
    comparison
  • Peter is taller than Jim
  • This car is faster than that one.

4
Long adjectives
  • Put more (adverb of degree) in front of longer
    words, e.g.
  • difficult more difficult
  • interesting more interesting
  • beautiful more beautiful
  • In sentences
  • Mary is more beautiful than Sally.
  • This book is more interesting than that one.

5
Superlative
  • The superlative of a word is used to compare
    three or more things/people and to pick out one
    thing/person as more X than all the others.
  • Everest is the highest mountain in the world.
  • It is also the most famous mountain in the world.

6
Remember
  • adjectives are compared like this
  • big bigger the biggest
  • easy easier the easiest
  • interesting more interesting the most
    interesting
  • famous more famous the most famous

7
Without comparative forms
  • Some adjectives do not normally have comparative
    and superlative forms
  • absent,
  • equal,
  • left,
  • opposite,
  • right,
  • single.

8
Irregularities
  • Certain adjectives have separate forms for
    comparative and superlative, or are in some other
    way irregular
  • good better the best (the same is used for
    well, meaning in good health)
  • bad, ill, evil worse the worst
  • many, much more the most

9
Different forms
  • Some adjectives form their comparative and
    superlative degrees in two ways
  • old older/elder the oldest/eldest
  • far farther/further the farthest/furthest
  • late later the latest/last
  • near nearer the nearest/next

10
Note the difference in meaning
  • elder born first of the two
  • eldest born before the other members of the
    family
  • farther/further longer in distance
  • further more, extra
  • latest newest
  • last final
  • nearest closest
  • next the one after this

11
Dont forget
  • Asas
  • John is as tall as Bob.
  • Your house is as large as mine.
  • Not so/as.. as..
  • This book is not so interesting as that one.
  • The tree is not as tall as the building over
    there.

12
In idioms
  • As good as gold
  • As poor as a church mouse
  • As brave as a lion
  • As black as coal
  • As blind as a bat
  • As pale as a ghost
  • As cool as a cucumber
  • As fierce as a tiger
  • As light as a feather
  • As white as a sheet
  • As white as snow
  • As wise as an owl

13
Source
  • An A-Z of English Grammar and usage by Geoffrey
    Leech, Edward Arnold, 1989, ISBN 0-7131-8472-8
  • English Idioms and how to use them by
    Seidl/McMordie. Oxford university press, 1978,
    ISBN 0-19-432764-7
  • (ENG_203_-_THE_COPMPARISON_OF_ADJECTIVES.ppt)
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