fairer, fairest
The comparative is greater and the superlative is greatest.
The comparative is hotter.
Easier is the comparative.
"Faster" is a comparative of fast. The related superlative is "fastest."
The comparative and superlative are fairer and fairest.
fairer, fairest
fairer, fairest
fairer, fairest
As with most monosyllabic adjectives, fair takes the inflection "er" for the comparative and "est" for the superlative degree. (Ex. "Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who is the fairest of them all?")
To fair means "to smooth or even out unevenness." Fairer is the comparative form of the adjective fair.
Yonhyok Choe has written: 'How to manage free and fair elections' -- subject(s): Elections, Comparative government
Yes, fairer is the normal comparative degree of the English adjective fair. It is used thus... It was a fairer system of justice. or He was much fairer than his father... However, sometimes the Frenchified form "more fair" seems better, as in "he was more fair than his father.".
Comparative is when u are comparing two things and some key words are compare and contrast where as experimental is when a fair test is designed and u are changing many things but only one at a time
There is no comparative of get.
The comparative of "first" is "earlier" or "prior".
comparative