WREN & MARTIN's English grammar-English grammar worksheet: degrees of comparison
English Grammar Worksheet: Degrees of Comparison
Instructions: Fill in the blanks with the correct Comparative or Superlative degree of the adjective provided in the brackets.
Part A: Fill in the Blanks
Prevention is __________ than cure. (Safe)
This is the __________ news I have heard all week. (Bad)
Of the two sisters, Maya is the __________. (Merry)
The Sahara is one of the __________ places on Earth. (Dry)
This math problem is __________ than the last one. (Difficult)
He is the __________ man I have ever met. (Able)
The patient’s condition is __________ today than it was yesterday. (Ill)
This flower is __________ than that one. (Ugly)
A __________ person would have stayed silent, but he spoke up. (Timid — use comparative)
The weather today is even __________ than yesterday. (Gloomy)
Part B: Identification Table
Complete the following table by providing the missing degrees of comparison.
| Positive | Comparative | Superlative |
| Black | _________ | Blackest |
| _________ | More excellent | _________ |
| Mad | Madder | _________ |
| Unjust | _________ | Most unjust |
| Little | _________ | Least |
| _________ | Fewer | _________ |
| Exact | _________ | Most exact |
| Numerous | More numerous | _________ |
Answer Key (For Teachers)
Part A:
Safer (Comparing two things)
Worst (Superlative for 'bad')
Merrier (Comparing two people)
Driest (Superlative for 'dry')
More difficult (Long adjective)
Ablest (Superlative for 'able')
Worse (Comparative for 'ill')
Uglier (Ends in 'y', change to 'i')
More timid
Gloomier
Part B:
Black, Blacker, Blackest
Excellent, More excellent, Most excellent
Mad, Madder, Maddest
Unjust, More unjust, Most unjust
Little, Less, Least
Few, Fewer, Fewest
Exact, More exact, Most exact
Numerous, More numerous, Most numerous
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