The two principal types of kayaks are: the easily maneuverable white kayak and the largest sea kayak. What is the grammatical mistake present in the previous statement?
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》 satyam _bradwaj
So you’ve taken lessons, started rolling, and probably been on a number of kayaking trips with friends or clubs. Lately you've reached the conclusion that something is holding you back from becoming a better kayaker -- your kayak (or the limited selection of kayaks you’ve been able to borrow or rent).
In contrast to beginners who tend to waste money and take needless risks by buying their first kayak too early (as in before taking any lessons), most intermediates wait too long to upgrade. We known people who "made do" with terrible handling, ill fitting boats for years while they shopped for the perfect kayak. Some people spend years test paddling every kayak they can find and reading boat reviews (most of which are not worth the paper or bandwidth they were published on), and still they can't commit to buying a new kayak. Meanwhile they've test paddled a half dozen kayaks that would all be huge improvements over what they use now. This is a classic example of "perfect" being the enemy of good. At this level, time and money spent on more lessons may be mostly wasted if the kayak you own or rent doesn't fit right or has poor handling qualities. So skills stagnate and interest drops off as you get frustrated with your lack of progress, or worse, you take needless risks using a kayak that isn't appropriate for the type of adventures they now go on.
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Answer:
Adjective - Largest
because You have to know that you are only comparing two things, so you can’t use the superlative form of the adjective.
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