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In English grammar the '''degree of comparison''' of an ] or ] describes the relational value of one thing with something in another clause of a sentence. An adjective may simply describe a quality, (the ''positive''); it may compare the quality with that of another of its kind ('']'' degree); and it may compare the quality with many or all others ('']'' degree).<ref></ref><ref>Tom McArthur, ed. (1992) ''The Oxford Companion to the English Language'', Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-214183-X</ref> In other languages it may describe a very large degree of a particular quality (in Semitic linguistics, called an ]). | |||
The degree of comparison may be expressed ], or ]. In English, for example, most ] and some ] adjectives have morphological degrees of comparison: ''green'' (positive), ''greener'' (comparative), ''greenest'' (superlative); ''pretty'', ''prettier'', ''prettiest''; while most polysyllabic adjectives use syntax: ''complex'', ''more complex'', ''most complex''. | |||
# The positive degree is the most basic form of the adjective, positive because it does not relate to any superior or inferior qualities of other things in speech. | |||
# The comparative degree denotes a greater amount of a quality relative to something else. The phrase “Anna is taller than her father” means that Anna's degree of tallness is greater than her father's degree of tallness. | |||
# The superlative degree denotes the most, the largest, etc., by which it differs from other things. | |||
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== See also == | |||
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== References == | |||
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