English, asked by sahii8955, 9 months ago

What is positive degree comparative degree and superlative degree?

Answers

Answered by santoshkoli
1

Answer:

(1)The adjective 'strong' is in its simple from. It is called positive degree (2)The adjective 'stronger' refers to a higher degree, when there is a comparisonof two nouns. It is called comparative degree. (3) The adjective 'strongest' refers to the highest degree of comparison of one with more than two nouns It is called superlative degree.

Answered by sweetgirl4721
0

Question => What is positive degree comparative degree and superlative degree?

=> Positive Degree - "Positive degree" is a term that relates to adjectives and adverbs. An adjective or adverb that does not make a comparison is said to be in the positive degree. ... In English, there are three degrees of comparison: The Positive Degree. The positive degree of an adjective or adverb offers no comparison.

=> Comparative Degree - When two items/people are compared, a comparative degree is used by putting 'er' to the adjective word in association with the word 'than'. In some cases 'more' is used. Comparative degree example: She is smarter than her sister. She is more cheerful than her sister.

=> Superlative Degree - Superlative adjectives are used to describe an object which is at the upper or lower limit of a quality (the tallest, the smallest, the fastest, the highest). They are used in sentences where a subject is compared to a group of objects. Noun (subject) + verb + the + superlative adjective + noun (object).

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