When comparing two things, we use the comparative form of the adjective, which is "longer" for "long."
"Longest" is the superlative form used when comparing three or more things.
When comparing two things using an adjective with more than one syllable (like "beautiful"), we use "more" + adjective to form the comparative.
"Most beautiful" is for comparing three or more things (superlative).
For adjectives with more than two syllables, use "more" to form the comparative.
So, "more beautiful" is correct.
This test is harder than the last one.
"Harder" is the correct comparative form of "hard" to compare two things.
"Bigger" is the comparative form of "big," used to compare two things.
The sentence compares two houses, so the comparative degree is appropriate.
Big: Positive Degree
Bigger: Comparative degree
Biggest: Superlative degree
Comparative adjectives compare two things and usually use "more" with adjectives of two or more syllables like "boring."
"More boring" correctly shows the comparison between the movie and the book.
"Neater" is the correct comparative form of the adjective "neat" to compare two things.
The comparative adjective "neater" is used to show the difference between two items (his handwriting vs. hers).
"Taller" is the correct comparative form of the adjective "tall."
Comparative adjectives are used to compare two things, often ending in -er.
Today's weather is worse than yesterday's."
When comparing two things (today's weather vs. yesterday's), you use the comparative form of adjectives.
The comparative form of "bad" is "worse".
"Bore" is unrelated and refers to boredom, not weather.
"Bad" is the base form and not suitable in a comparative sentence.
Pakistan is famous for its colourful festivals.
"Colourful" is the correct adjective to describe "festivals."
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