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Comparative & Superlative (upper-intermediate)
COMPARISON Comparative & Superlative (upper-intermediate)
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You’re the most intelligent person I’ve ever met.
You’re getting taller and taller; cities are becoming more and more dangerous. The more I eat, the fatter I get. The kitchen is bigger than the bathroom; houses are cheaper than they used to be. The flat sold more quickly than I expected; houses sell faster in the spring. This is the least spacious house in…; there’s less space in my room than in yours. Which flat has the fewest rooms? Can you identify the comparative and the superlative forms in these examples?
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ANSWERS The most intelligent…I’ve ever met
Taller and taller; more and more dangerous The more…the fatter bigger than the bathroom; cheaper than they used to be More quickly; faster the least spacious; less space the fewest rooms ANSWERS
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And now can you think of new rules to make comparisons?
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RULE 1: Present perfect with ever > we often use a superlative > example1
RULE 2: DOUBLE comparatives to say that something is changing > example 2 RULE 3: The + comparative…, the + comparative to say that one thing is the consequence of the other. > example 3 RULE 4: We can make comparisons with simple nouns and with clauses> example 4 RULE 5: We use more and most to form comparative / superlative adverbs (more quickly). But we add –er, -est to some short adverbs (faster) RULE 6: We use less and least with long adjectives (the least spacious), adverbs and uncountable nouns (less space) RULE 7: fewer & fewest with countable nouns (the fewest rooms)
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