English Grammar — MCQ Irregular Comparison of Adjectives Good | Well | Bad | Evil | Ill Class 9 / 1st Year Intermediate

 

English Grammar — MCQ Irregular Comparison of Adjectives Good | Well | Bad | Evil | Ill Class 9 / 1st Year Intermediate


Q1. Choose the correct comparative form of "good" in the following sentence: "This mango is _______ than the one I ate yesterday." A. gooder B. more good C. better D. best

Q2. Choose the correct superlative form of "bad" in the following sentence: "This was the _______ storm the city had ever experienced." A. baddest B. most bad C. worse D. worst

Q3. Choose the correct comparative form of "ill" in the following sentence: "She was feeling _______ today than she was yesterday." A. iller B. more ill C. worse D. worst

Q4. Choose the correct superlative form of "good" in the following sentence: "She gave the _______ performance of her entire career." A. better B. goodest C. most good D. best

Q5. Choose the correct comparative form of "evil" in the following sentence: "Of the two villains in the story, the second one was _______." A. most evil B. eviler C. worse D. more evil

Q6. Choose the correct superlative form of "well" in the following sentence: "Among all the singers, she sang the _______." A. more well B. better C. wellest D. best

Q7. Choose the correct comparative form of "bad" in the following sentence: "The traffic today is _______ than it was last Monday." A. more bad B. bader C. worst D. worse

Q8. Choose the correct form to complete the sentence: "Of all the students, Ram performed the _______ in the mathematics test." A. worse B. most badly C. worst D. baddest

Q9. Choose the correct comparative form of "well" in the following sentence: "She speaks English _______ than her elder sister." A. more well B. weller C. best D. better

Q10. Choose the correct form to fill in the blank: "He chose the _______ of the two options available to him." A. worse B. worst C. most bad D. baddest




Answers with Explanations


Q1.C — better. Good is an irregular adjective — it does not follow the standard -er/-est pattern for forming degrees of comparison. The three degrees of good are: good (positive), better (comparative), best (superlative). These forms must be memorised as they are completely irregular. Gooder and more good are both incorrect and do not exist in standard English grammar. Correct: This mango is better than the one I ate yesterday.

Q2.D — worst. Bad is an irregular adjective with completely unpredictable forms. The three degrees of bad are: bad (positive), worse (comparative), worst (superlative). None of these forms follow the standard -er/-est pattern. Baddest and most bad are both incorrect in standard grammar. Worse is the comparative, not the superlative. Correct: This was the worst storm the city had ever experienced.

Q3.C — worse. Ill when used to mean sick or unwell shares its comparative and superlative forms with bad. The degrees of ill (in the sense of sickness) are: ill (positive), worse (comparative), worst (superlative). Iller and more ill are both incorrect in standard English. When comparing degrees of sickness or health, worse is the accepted comparative form. Correct: She was feeling worse today than she was yesterday.

Q4.D — best. Best is the superlative form of good. The three irregular degrees of good are: good (positive), better (comparative), best (superlative). The superlative is used when comparing three or more things or when expressing the highest degree of quality. Better is the comparative (used for two things). Goodest and most good do not exist in standard English. Correct: She gave the best performance of her entire career.

Q5.D — more evil. Evil is one of the few adjectives in this group that can follow the regular comparison pattern. The degrees of evil are: evil (positive), more evil (comparative), most evil (superlative). However worse is also sometimes used informally. Since the question specifically asks about the comparison of evil as a quality or moral characteristic, more evil is the most grammatically precise and formally correct answer here.

Q6.D — best. Well when used as an adjective (meaning in good health) or as an adverb (meaning in a good manner) shares the same irregular comparative and superlative forms as good. The degrees are: well (positive), better (comparative), best (superlative). These forms are shared between good and well in English. Wellest does not exist. Correct: Among all the singers, she sang the best.

Q7.D — worse. Worse is the comparative form of bad. The three irregular degrees of bad are: bad (positive), worse (comparative), worst (superlative). The comparative is used when comparing two things. More bad and bader are both incorrect. Worst is the superlative — it is used when comparing three or more things or expressing the lowest degree. Correct: The traffic today is worse than it was last Monday.

Q8.C — worst. Worst is the superlative form of badly and bad. Since the sentence refers to performance among all students (more than two), the superlative form is required. The degrees of badly are: badly (positive), worse (comparative), worst (superlative). Most badly is technically acceptable but worst is the standard and preferred form in formal English grammar. Correct: Ram performed the worst in the mathematics test.

Q9.D — better. Well when used as an adverb (describing how someone does something) forms its degrees irregularly: well (positive), better (comparative), best (superlative). The comparative better is used here because two people are being compared — she and her elder sister. More well and weller do not exist in standard English. Best is the superlative. Correct: She speaks English better than her elder sister.

Q10.A — worse. When choosing between two options, the comparative form is required — not the superlative. Since only two options are mentioned (the two options), the comparative worse is correct. The superlative worst would be used if there were three or more options. Most bad and baddest are both incorrect in standard English. Correct: He chose the worse of the two options available to him.

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