English, asked by kamalpreetkaur310, 3 months ago

d. The winters in a hill station is worser than in a city.
e.
Jack is helpfuller than his brother.
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Answers

Answered by rr3876969
0

Answer:

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Explanation:

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Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

When there is an interchange of the sentence from comparative to positive, without changing its meaning, a negative word 'no' or 'not' is added. Here the sentence is in the comparative degree. As 'Harry' is taller than 'brother', the brother is shorter than 'Harry.' In other words, the brother is 'not as tall as' Harry. Option A is correct because the sentence is of the positive degree of comparison using 'not as tall as', without changing the meaning of the sentence. Option B is incorrect because the adjective 'very' is not a comparative and the sentence is not of the positive degree. Option C is incorrect because it is opposite in meaning to that of the given sentence, where the 'brother' is taller than 'Harry'.

Explanation:

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