Asked by 123
Either the comparative "-er" or the word "____" is used when comparing two nouns.
A more
B most
C many
Would you ever use BOTH "-est" and "most" when comparing three or more nouns?
A no
B yes
C sometimes
Comparative or Superlative?: Bob is older than me, but I have a birthday coming up soon!
A comparative
B superlative
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All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
1) A — more. (Use -er or more for comparing two nouns.)
2) A — no. (You use either -est or most — not both together.)
3) A — comparative. ("Older than" compares two people.)
2) A — no. (You use either -est or most — not both together.)
3) A — comparative. ("Older than" compares two people.)
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