• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • Articles & lessons
    • Grammar & vocabulary lessons
    • IELTS preparation
    • British culture
    • All articles and lessons
  • About
  • Contact
Crown Academy of English

English lessons and resources




You are here: Home / English lessons / Superlative adjectives

Superlative adjectives

19th September 2018 by Andrew

Use of superlative adjectives

We use superlative adjectives to compare one thing in a group with all of the other things in the group.

We use “the” before the superlative adjective because we are referring to one specific person or thing.

Example:

family
by photostock | FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Mark is the tallest person in the family.


How to modify a superlative

Method 1

“one of the” + superlative + plural noun

Example:
Great Britain is one of the richest countries in the world.

Meaning:
There are several very rich countries in the world. Great Britain is an example of those very rich countries.

Method 2

“some of the” + superlative + plural noun

Example:
New York, London and Tokyo are some of the most expensive cities in the world.

Meaning:
There are several very expensive cities in the world. New York, London and Tokyo are examples of those cities.

Method 3

We can also modify a superlative with an ordinal number. An ordinal number tells us the order of a group of things. We call the “normal” numbers cardinal numbers.

NumberCardinal numberOrdinal number
1onefirst
2twosecond
3threethird
4fourfourth
5fivefifth

Look at the picture below. You can see that the members of the family are all of different heights.

family
by photostock | FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Mark is the tallest person in the family.

After Mark, there is an order from the tallest to the shortest.

We use the following structure:

“the” + ordinal number + superlative

Examples:
David is the second tallest person in the family.
Jane is the third tallest person in the family.

Method 4

We can also replace “the” with a possessive.

Form:
possessive + superlative

Examples:
Physics is her hardest exam.
Jane is my best friend.
Maths is Mark’s hardest exam.

Form of superlative adjectives

The form of a superlative depends on the number of syllables in the original adjective. See below for the grammar rules.

One-syllable adjectives

For most one-syllable adjectives:

We add -est

AdjectiveSuperlative adjective
hardhardest
talltallest
shortshortest
smallsmallest

Example:

solar system

Mercury is the smallest planet in the solar system.

For one-syllable adjectives ending in “e”:

We add -st

AdjectiveSuperlative adjective
finefinest
nicenicest
rarerarest

Example:
Jane is the nicest person in the office.

For one-syllable adjectives ending in a consonant, vowel and consonant:

We double the last consonant and add -est

AdjectiveSuperlative adjective
bigbigger
fatfatter
hothotter
thinthinner

Example:
Spain is the hottest country in Europe.

Two-syllable adjectives

For most two-syllable adjectives:

We use “most” + adjective

AdjectiveSuperlative adjective
carefulmost careful
famousmost famous
peacefulmost peaceful
pleasantmost pleasant
usefulmost useful

Example:
This is the most peaceful view that I have ever seen.

Two-syllable adjectives ending in “y”:

We change the “y” to “i” and add -est

AdjectiveSuperlative adjective
busybusiest
easyeasiest
funnyfunniest
happyhappiest

Example:
Saturday is the busiest day of the week for shopping.

Two-syllable adjectives ending in “er”, “le” or “ow”:

We usually add -est

AdjectiveSuperlative adjective
clevercleverest
gentlegentlest
narrownarrowest

Example:
David is the cleverest boy in the class.

Longer adjectives

Adjectives with three or more syllables:

We always use “most” + adjective

AdjectiveSuperlative adjective
complicatedmost complicated
enjoyablemost enjoyable
interestingmost interesting
Reading book
by “Cjcj-40067” | FreeImages.com

Example:
This is the most interesting book that I have ever read.

Irregular superlative adjectives

Some superlative adjectives are irregular:

Adjectivesuperlative adjective
badworst
goodbest

Examples:
He wants to be the best football player in the world.
In my opinion, she is the worst actress in Hollywood.

More English lessons

Comparative adjectives
Over 180 video lessons on our YouTube channel.
IELTS lessons with Ebook and practice tests
Parts of speech – English grammar
How to pass the IELTS with a band 8
List of all the lessons

English video lesson

Watch more English video lessons on our YouTube channel.

Filed Under: English lessons

More lessons

peas on spoon

“a little” and “a few ” to describe quantity

"a little" and "a few" are determiners. We write them before a noun.More specifically, they are quantifiers. They both describe a small quantity or … [Read More...] about “a little” and “a few ” to describe quantity

cake slice

The English verb SUGGEST

"suggest" is a verb.Pronunciation:     /səˈdʒest/ Meaning: To propose an idea, thing, or action for other people to … [Read More...] about The English verb SUGGEST

shaving

Past simple tense in English

We use the past simple tense to describe an action in the past. Example: Yesterday, he walked to the train station. In the above example, "he … [Read More...] about Past simple tense in English

London street

5 meanings of the English verb “accept”

“accept” is an English verb. Pronunciation:   /əkˈsept/ “accept” has 5 different uses and meaning. Let's look at each meaning in more … [Read More...] about 5 meanings of the English verb “accept”

walking

Adverbs of frequency

What are adverbs? An adverb is a word that modifies a verb (action). The adverb gives more information about the action. Example: Jane is … [Read More...] about Adverbs of frequency

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Stephanie Schipper says

    17th April 2022 at 2:33 am

    Which sentence is correct? Giraffes are the tallest animal or Giraffes are the tallest animals.

Primary Sidebar

Lessons

native english speaker

How to understand native English speakers

girl reading

How to improve your English vocabulary

peas on spoon

“a little” and “a few ” to describe quantity

doctor

The difference between practice and practise

Girl wearing headphones

Difference between hear and listen

handbag

compliment or complement





Footer

Follow us on social media

Crown Academy of English on YouTube Crown Academy of English on Twitter

Privacy policy

Privacy policy

Recent

  • 8 ways to say that something is FREE in English
  • English idioms and expressions related to CRIME
  • How to use either and neither – English lesson
  • Learn English vocabulary – Vegetables
  • English Idioms related to speed

Search