nicer, nicest
Yes. For example: An (ADJECTIVE) person --> A nice person A (MORE ADJECTIVE) person --> A nicer person
No. The word nicer is a comparative form of the adjective nice. The adverb is nicely and the comparative would be "more nicely." (*The term "play nice" is just a colloquial form; play nicely is correct.)
be nicer and nicer to them
Nice is an English word with no exact equivalent in French because it carries too many meanings. You must know exactly what you mean by it. The comparative of an adjective in French is generally formed by putting "plus" before it. The weather is nicer today: Il fait plus beau aujourd'hui; This person is nicer than that one: Celui-ci est plus gentille que celui-là
Wilson is nicer in my opinion.
He thinks your nicer.
A nicer word for theft is embezzlement.
# buy nicer computers # buy nicer chairs # buy nicer wall color or wall paper # buy nicer building or fix up the building # ADVERTISE MORE!!!!!
which one is better: nicer or nicest
mario is nicer
Nicer yes, but still mean.