Comparatives & Superlatives – English Grammar Exercises for A2

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for A2 » Comparatives & Superlatives – English Grammar Exercises for A2

Exercises:   123456789101112

Choose the best option to complete each sentence.

1   This jacket is a bit tight. Do you have a ______ size in stock?

     (a) more big

     (b) bigger

     (c) bigest

     (d) more bigger

2   I think the red dress is ______ than the blue one I tried on earlier.

     (a) prettyer

     (b) more pretty

     (c) prettier

     (d) as pretty

3   This shirt is too small. I need something ______ than this.

     (a) larger

     (b) large

     (c) more large

     (d) largest

4   The trousers are too long. Could you show me a ______ pair?

     (a) shorter

     (b) more short

     (c) shortter

     (d) shortest

5   These shoes are nice, but I’m looking for something ______ for walking all day.

     (a) comfortabler

     (b) more comfortable

     (c) most comfortable

     (d) more comfortably

6   This Medium size feels even ______ than the Small! It must be a different brand.

     (a) badder

     (b) more bad

     (c) worst

     (d) worse

7   I love this silk shirt, but it is much ______ than the cotton one.

     (a) expensiver

     (b) more expensive

     (c) most expensive

     (d) as expensive

8   Of all the jeans I have tried today, these are definitely ______!

     (a) the most comfortable

     (b) more comfortable

     (c) the comfortablest

     (d) most comfortable

9   The fitting room over there is ______ than this one because it has a better mirror.

     (a) gooder

     (b) better

     (c) best

     (d) more good

10   Do you have this sweater in a ______ color? This yellow is too bright for me.

     (a) darker

     (b) more dark

     (c) darkker

     (d) darkest

11   I’m afraid this XL is ______ than I expected. It’s still quite tight.

     (a) smaller

     (b) smallest

     (c) more small

     (d) small

12   This department store is much ______ than the boutique down the street.

     (a) more cheap

     (b) cheaper

     (c) cheapest

     (d) cheap

13   The ______ size we have available in this style is a Large.

     (a) larger

     (b) more large

     (c) largest

     (d) most large

14   This skirt is ______ than the one on the mannequin.

     (a) longer

     (b) more long

     (c) longest

     (d) longger

15   I’m sorry, but this shirt isn’t ______ the one I saw in the window display.

     (a) as nice as

     (b) more nice than

     (c) nicer that

     (d) nice than

16   The ______ the fabric, the more it will cost.

     (a) softer

     (b) more soft

     (c) softest

     (d) most soft

17   I need a belt that is ______ this one; this one is too short.

     (a) more long than

     (b) longer than

     (c) longest than

     (d) as long that

18   This mirror makes me look ______ than the mirror in the other room!

     (a) thiner

     (b) more thin

     (c) thinner

     (d) the thinnest

19   This is ______ price we can offer for this leather jacket, even with the discount.

     (a) the lower

     (b) lowest

     (c) the lowest

     (d) the most low

20   Could I try the Large? This Medium is ______ for me to wear comfortably.

     (a) more small

     (b) too small

     (c) smaller

     (d) the smallest

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1 (b) bigger

  • Why correct: “Big” is a one-syllable adjective ending in consonant-vowel-consonant, so we double the ‘g’ and add -er.
  • Analysis: (a) “More big” is a structural error; (c) “Bigest” is a spelling error; (d) “More bigger” is a common double-comparative mistake.

2 (c) prettier

  • Why correct: For two-syllable adjectives ending in -y, we change the -y to -i and add -er.
  • Analysis: (a) Spelling error; (b) “More pretty” is less natural; (d) “As pretty” is a meaning trap because it suggests no difference.

3 (a) larger

  • Why correct: “Large” ends in -e, so we just add -r for the comparative form.
  • Analysis: (b) Base form; (c) “More large” is incorrect; (d) Superlative is used for comparing 3+ items.

4 (a) shorter

  • Why correct: “Short” is a one-syllable adjective; we add -er to compare.
  • Analysis: (b) Structural error; (c) Spelling error (no double ‘t’); (d) Superlative error.

5 (b) more comfortable

  • Why correct: “Comfortable” is a long adjective (4 syllables), requiring “more.”
  • Analysis: (a) Structural error; (c) Superlative error; (d) “Comfortably” is an adverb.

6 (d) worse

  • Why correct: “Worse” is the irregular comparative form of “bad.”
  • Analysis: (a) Common mistake “badder”; (b) Structural error; (c) Superlative error.

7 (b) more expensive

  • Why correct: “Expensive” is a long adjective.
  • Analysis: (a) Common “expensiver” mistake; (c) Superlative error; (d) Needs another “as.”

8 (a) the most comfortable

  • Why correct: The speaker is comparing “all the jeans,” so the superlative “the most” is required.
  • Analysis: (b) Comparative error; (c) Structural error; (d) Missing “the.”

9 (b) better

  • Why correct: “Better” is the irregular comparative of “good.”
  • Analysis: (a) Common “gooder” mistake; (c) Superlative error; (d) Structural error.

10 (a) darker

  • Why correct: “Dark” is a one-syllable adjective; we add -er.
  • Analysis: (b) Structural error; (c) Spelling error; (d) Superlative error.

11 (a) smaller

  • Why correct: The speaker is comparing the actual fit to their expectation.
  • Analysis: (b) Superlative error; (c) Structural error; (d) Meaning trap (grammatically okay but lacks comparison).

12 (b) cheaper

  • Why correct: “Cheap” is a one-syllable adjective.
  • Analysis: (a) Common mistake; (c) Superlative error; (d) Base form.

13 (c) largest

  • Why correct: “The” indicates a superlative is needed to show the limit of the stock.
  • Analysis: (a) Comparative error; (b) Structural error; (d) Structural error.

14 (a) longer

  • Why correct: Standard comparative for “long.”
  • Analysis: (b) Common mistake; (c) Superlative error; (d) Spelling error.

15 (a) as nice as

  • Why correct: “As + adjective + as” is used to show equality (or lack thereof with “not”).
  • Analysis: (b) “Nice” is short, shouldn’t use “more”; (c) Wrong preposition (“that” instead of “than”); (d) Missing “more” or “-er.”

16 (a) softer

  • Why correct: This follows the “The [comparative], the [comparative]” structure.
  • Analysis: (b) Structural error; (c/d) Superlative errors.

17 (b) longer than

  • Why correct: Comparative “longer” + “than” for a direct comparison.
  • Analysis: (a) Common mistake; (c) Superlative error; (d) Structural error (“as… that”).

18 (c) thinner

  • Why correct: “Thin” is consonant-vowel-consonant, so we double the ‘n’.
  • Analysis: (a) Spelling error; (b) Structural error; (d) Superlative error.

19 (c) the lowest

  • Why correct: Superlative “the lowest” indicates the extreme end of the price range.
  • Analysis: (a) Comparative error; (b) Missing “the”; (d) Structural error.

20 (b) too small

  • Why correct: “Too” is used to indicate an excessive amount that causes a problem (meaning trap).
  • Analysis: (a) Structural error; (c) Grammatically correct but contextually, “too small” better explains why they need a different size; (d) Superlative error.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER
  • One-syllable adjectives: Add -er for comparative and the -est for superlative (small → smaller → the smallest).
  • One-syllable (CVC): Double the final consonant (big → bigger → the biggest).
  • Two-syllable adjectives ending in -y: Change -y to -i and add -er/-est (heavy → heavier → the heaviest).
  • Long adjectives (2+ syllables): Use more/less for comparative and the most/the least for superlative (expensive → more expensive → the most expensive).
  • Irregular forms:
    • Good → Better → The best
    • Bad → Worse → The worst
    • Far → Farther/Further → The farthest/furthest
  • Comparison of Equality: Use as + adjective + as (This shirt is as large as that one).
  • The “Than” Rule: Always use than (not that or then) when comparing two things directly.

Exercises:   123456789101112

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