Thursday, November 26, 2020

Comparative Adjectives

Comparative Adjectives

When we talk about two things, we can "compare" them. We can see if they are the same or different. Perhaps they are the same in some ways and different in other ways. We can use comparative adjectives to describe the differences.

Formation of Comparative Adjectives

There are two ways to make or to "form" a comparative adjective:

short adjectives: add "-er"

long adjectives: use "more"

With some 2-syllable adjectives, we can use "-er" OR "more":

quiet → quieter/more quiet

clever → cleverer/more clever

narrow → narrower/more narrow

simple → simpler/more simple

Use of Comparative Adjectives

We use comparative adjectives when talking about 2 things (not 3 or 10 or 1,000,000 things, only 2 things).

Often, the comparative adjective is followed by "than".

Look at these examples:

John is 1m80. He is tall. But Chris is 1m85. He is taller than John.

America is big. But Russia is bigger.

I want to have a more powerful computer.

Is French more difficult than English?

#WhichWord

allusion, illusion

An allusion is an indirect reference. 

Example: Did you catch my allusion to Shakespeare? 

An illusion is a false or misleading appearance. 

Example: Mirrors give the room an illusion of depth.

#pause4english

Comparative Adjectives

Comparative Adjectives When we talk about two things, we can "compare" them. We can see if they are the same or different. Perhaps...