Asked by Chuck Bass

Sometimes, the comparative and superlative forms are used in the “absolute” sense, rather than for a specific comparison.



True

False

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
True.

Comparative and superlative forms are often used without an explicit comparator — the comparison is implied or the form is used for emphasis. Examples: "That's the best!" (no stated comparison) and "He's getting better" (no explicit reference point).