English, asked by dattatraykalantre47, 2 months ago

The suffering of men and women is stranger than anything.Change into positive degree.

Answers

Answered by NehaNagal
2

\huge\bold\green{Answer}

An adjective can exist in three forms-positive, comparative and superlative. The positive form is the base form of the adjective. The comparative form expresses a higher degree of some quality. The superlative form expresses the highest degree. For adjectives with a single syllable, the comparative degree is formed by suffixing '-er' and the superlative degree is formed by suffixing '-est'.

An adjective can exist in three forms-positive, comparative and superlative. The positive form is the base form of the adjective. The comparative form expresses a higher degree of some quality. The superlative form expresses the highest degree. For adjectives with a single syllable, the comparative degree is formed by suffixing '-er' and the superlative degree is formed by suffixing '-est'. The adjective, 'strong' is the positive form. Its comparative degree of comparison is 'stronger'. Its superlative degree of comparison is 'strongest '. Hence, option A is the correct answer.

An adjective can exist in three forms-positive, comparative and superlative. The positive form is the base form of the adjective. The comparative form expresses a higher degree of some quality. The superlative form expresses the highest degree. For adjectives with a single syllable, the comparative degree is formed by suffixing '-er' and the superlative degree is formed by suffixing '-est'. The adjective, 'strong' is the positive form. Its comparative degree of comparison is 'stronger'. Its superlative degree of comparison is 'strongest '. Hence, option A is the correct answer. Options B and D are incorrect as 'more strong' and 'most strong' are incorrect usages of the said adjective.

An adjective can exist in three forms-positive, comparative and superlative. The positive form is the base form of the adjective. The comparative form expresses a higher degree of some quality. The superlative form expresses the highest degree. For adjectives with a single syllable, the comparative degree is formed by suffixing '-er' and the superlative degree is formed by suffixing '-est'. The adjective, 'strong' is the positive form. Its comparative degree of comparison is 'stronger'. Its superlative degree of comparison is 'strongest '. Hence, option A is the correct answer. Options B and D are incorrect as 'more strong' and 'most strong' are incorrect usages of the said adjective. Option C is incorrect as 'strongest' is the superlative form of the adjective, not positive form.

Answered by faisstp
9

Answer:

no other thing is so strong as the suffering of men and women

Explanation:

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