Writing Tips has been archived and won’t be updated before it is permanently deleted.
For the most up-to-date content, please consult Writing Tips Plus, which combines content from Writing Tips and The Canadian Style. And don’t forget to update your bookmarks!
In English, adverbs fall into the category called modifiers. (A modifier is a word that either describes or limits the meaning of the word it refers to. There are two main classes of modifiers: adjectives and adverbs.)
Adverbs have three forms: positive, comparative and superlative.
The positive form is the adverb itself:
The comparative form is used to compare two actions:
The superlative form is used to compare three or more actions:
The comparative is formed in the following ways:
The superlative is formed in the following ways:
Note: The adverb early is an exception. Although it is longer than one syllable, it forms its comparative and superlative forms by adding ‑er and ‑est: early, earlier, earliest.
The following table shows five common adverbs with irregular comparative and superlative forms:
Positive | Comparative | Superlative |
---|---|---|
badly | worse | worst |
far | farther | farthest |
little | less | least |
much | more | most |
well | better | best |
Don’t combine the two forms for the comparative or superlative. Use either more or ‑er (or most or ‑est), but not both:
Don’t use the superlative when comparing only two persons or things:
© Public Services and Procurement Canada, 2024
TERMIUM Plus®, the Government of Canada's terminology and linguistic data bank
Writing tools – Writing Tips
A product of the Translation Bureau