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Saeed Gharaati
The superlative adjective from heavy is heaviest but the superlative of widely is most widely. Why?
e.g. Spanish is the most widely spoken language in South America.
6 apr. 2013 13:48
Antwoorden · 4
2
Because "widely" is an adverb, not an adjective like "heavy". Even among adjectives, generally only those of Anglo-Saxon (and not French, etc) can form the superlative with -est. A good rule of thumb is to form the superlative with -est only with adjectives with two syllables or fewer.
6 april 2013
1
Yes, "widely" or "most widely" is an adverb in the sentence you give. And "widely" would never be a superlative.
For superlatives, the basic adjectives in your question are
heavy
wide
We use -iest for to form the superlative of words that end in -y. Therefore, the superlative of heavy is heaviest.
We use -est for most other words that have one or two syllables.
Therefore, the superlative of wide is widest.
But for most words that have three or more syllables, we would *usually* say "most + basic adjective": for instance "most beautiful."
And there are the irregular superlatives:
good - better - BEST
bad - worse - WORST
far - further - furthest
little - less - LEAST
but
few - fewer - fewest
6 april 2013
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Saeed Gharaati
Taalvaardigheden
Engels, Frans, Perzisch (Farsi)
Taal die wordt geleerd
Engels, Frans
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