ANSWERS: 1
  • 1) "In English grammar the degree of comparison of an adjective or adverb describes the relational value of one thing with something in another clause of a sentence. An adjective may simply describe a quality, (the positive); it may compare the quality with that of another of its kind (comparative degree); and it may compare the quality with many or all others (superlative degree)." "The degree of comparison may be expressed morphologically, or syntactically. In English, for example, most monosyllabic and some disyllabic adjectives have morphological degrees of comparison: green (positive), greener (comparative), greenest (superlative); pretty, prettier, prettiest; while most polysyllabic adjectives use syntax: complex, more complex, most complex." Source and further information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degree_of_comparison 2) For instance: big, bigger, biggest. But not: bag, bager, bagest (or bagger, baggest) Bag is a noun or a verb (to bag), not an adjective. Bagger is a noun. Bagging is the present participle of the verb to bag. 3) "Noun Singular bag Plural bags" "Verb Infinitive to bag (third-person singular simple present bags, present participle bagging, simple past bagged, past participle bagged)" Source: http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/bag 4) "Noun Singular bagger (plural baggers) One who bags" 5) Anyways, we have superlative Answerbaggers...

Copyright 2023, Wired Ivy, LLC

Answerbag | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy