The forms for the adjective forward are: positive: forward comparative: more forward superlative: most forward
The three degrees (of comparison) for adjectives are Positive, Comparative and Superlative. Example: hard (positive) harder (comparative) hardest (superlative)
A superlative form of something compares three or more things. For example, the superlative form of beautiful would be most beautiful and the comparative form would be more beautiful. Another example would be big, superlative would be biggest and comparative would be bigger.
The comparative form is more respectful and the superlative is most respectful. In general, words of three or more syllables use more and most to form the comparative and superlative forms, because adding -er or -est as a suffix (which works well with short words) tends to result in a word that is too long and difficult to pronounce.
For adjectives of three syllables or more, put "more" in front of them for the comparative and "most" for the superlative.
Nouns do not have comparative forms; adjectives have comparative and superlative forms. The comparative form for the adjective beautiful is more beautiful; the superlative form is most beautiful.
Positive, comparative, and superlative
There are two forms of comparative and one superlative. For sad, these are sad, sadder, and saddest. He was sad. His friend seemed sadder. But the girl was the saddest of the three children.
No, they are just synonyms. The comparative of difficultis more difficult (the superlative is the most difficult). The comparative of hard is harder (the superlative is the hardest).
The superlative form of an adjective is used to compare three or more things, expressing the highest degree of a quality. It typically ends in "-est" or is preceded by "most" or "least." Examples include "tallest," "most beautiful," and "least spicy."
positive,comparative,superlative
The comparative form compares two things eg the red car is faster than the blue car, (faster is the comparative adjective).The superlative form is used to compare three or more things and to pick out one as being more (something) than all the others. The red car is fast and so is the blue car but the silver one is the fastest, (fastest is the superlative adjective)