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rook
royal - comparative/superlative degree
Hey. Does this adjective have a comparative/superlative degree? Is it even possible to say 'more royal' or 'the most royal' or 'royaler' 'the royalest'? Thanks.
4 de may. de 2018 21:30
Respuestas · 1
1
"More royal" and "most royal". "This queen's voice sounds more royal than the previous queen's voice did."
If the word is 1 syllable, say -er and -est
bigger, smartest
If the word is 3 or more syllables, say "more" and "most"
More intelligent, most enthuiastic
If the word contains 2 syllables, look at the last letter.
If the last letter is "y", ier/iest and more/most are both acceptable, but ier/iest is preferred
uglier, happiest
If the word ends in any other letter, say more and most
more upset, most alive, most royal
EXCEPTION: more fun, not funner
EXCEPTION TO EXCEPTION: In parts of Canada, Australia, and the west coast of the US, it is OK to say "funner" in casual speech, but not in writing.
4 de mayo de 2018
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rook
Competencias lingüísticas
Inglés, Ruso
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés
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