Comparative and Superlative Adjectives: Tú - Warm Up - Kahoot
Comparative and Superlative Adjectives: Tú - Warm Up - Kahoot
Comparative and Superlative Adjectives: Tú - Warm Up - Kahoot
Most one-syllable adjectives can also form the comparative and superlative with more or most
instead of -er or -est. We usually use this form for emphasis in spoken English:
E.g.: You should be more proud of the things you’ve already achieved. (= prouder)
I think this is the one she is the most proud of. (= proudest)
E.g.: He’s by far the cleverest student in his class. (= He is much cleverer than the others.)
She’s easily the best programmer in the company. (informal) (= She is much better than the
others.)
E.g.: New York is one of the largest cities in the world. (= There may be some larger.)
When we refer to a place or group we use ‘in’ not ‘of’ after superlatives.
(X) New York is one of the largest cities of the world.
(✓) ..in the world.
***But in formal English we can put an ‘of’ phrase at the beginning of the sentence, before the
superlative.
AS … AS …
We use as … as … to say two things are similar or equal in some way
as + adjective + as or as + adverb + as
We can omit the second part, as …, if the comparison is clear:
E.g. John didn’t do as well as Helen in the exam
John didn’t do as well (as her* / as she did)
*This is considered informal
We use as … as, but not as … so, in comparisons:
E.g. Tea isn’t as strong so coffee
Tea isn’t as strong as coffee
As + many /much / little / few + as
(the)we use as + many / much / little / few + as in comparisons without a. We cannot use more /
less / several etc:
E.g. Bill doesn’t have as much money as Anne
The same (as)
We always use the in comparisons with same:
E.g. Their car is the same (as ours)
Peter is the same age (as George)
We can emphasise the same using exactly:
E.g. Their car is exactly the same (as yours)
Peter is exactly the same age (as George)
HUY - So … as …
In negative statements we can use so … as instead of as … as:
E.g. Computers are not quite as / so expensive as they were
In positive sentences and in questions we cannot use so … as:
E.g. She worked so hard as she could to finish early
She worked as hard as she could to finish early
Could you try and get here so quickly as you can, please?
Could you try and get here as quickly as you can, please?
HUY - Like and as
We use like and as to say things are similar. We use like to make a comparison, and as to describe
a position or function:
form Example
like + noun He runs like the wind
like + pronoun My brother is just like me.
like + noun Like the Greeks, Italians use a lot of olive oil
E.g.: We hope the new treaty will form a bridge between our two nations. (a bridge = metaphor for
a link)
Repeating comparatives
We can repeat the comparative adjective to say that something is changing (increasing or
decreasing) all the time, usually with the Present Continuous:
form Meaning/use Example
Comparative adj + and + changing all the time She was getting more and more irritated
comparative adj
the + comparative adj + verb + two things change at the
The older I get, the wiser I become
the + comparative adj + verb same time The less intelligent they are, the more
difficult they will find the test.
the + comparative adj + the + used in common phrases the bigger the better
comparative adj the sooner the better
Contrastive Comparison
When we contrast two related qualities, we always use more (not -er):
(X) I‘m sadder than disappointed.
(✓) I’m more sad than disappointed.