Comparative Adverbs in EnglishA2
Learn to form and use comparative adverbs in English, compare degree, and practice with examples to sound natural in speaking and writing.
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Prerequisites
What They Do
Comparative adverbs show that one action happens to a greater, smaller, or different degree than another. They compare how someone does something, how often something happens, or how much an action is true. These forms are important for Superlative Adverbs and also help shape natural comparison patterns across English.
Short Forms
Short one word adverbs usually form the comparative with -er. The adverb stays invariable, so it does not change for number or gender. Use than to name the second action or point of comparison.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| A short adverb normally takes -er in comparison. | ||
| The adverb does not agree with number or gender. | ||
| Than introduces the thing being compared. |
Ly Forms
Adverbs ending in -ly usually use more for the comparative. The adverb itself does not change form, and the comparison is carried by the word more. This pattern is common in careful style and is often preferred over rare forms such as quicklier.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| An adverb ending in ly usually forms the comparative with more. | ||
| More can compare degree in a neutral and natural way. | ||
| The comparative still needs than when two things are compared. |
Irregular Comparisons
A few common adverbs have irregular comparative forms that do not follow the regular patterns. Well becomes better and badly becomes worse. These forms are fixed and must be learned as separate comparative words.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| Well becomes better in the comparative. | ||
| Badly becomes worse in the comparative. | ||
| Irregular comparative forms are learned as whole words. |
Comparison Patterns
Comparative adverbs commonly appear with than, which introduces the second item or clause. They can also compare frequency or degree with expressions such as twice as often and far more. For contrast in the negative, less can mark a smaller degree or lower frequency.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| Than introduces the second point in a comparison. | ||
| Comparatives can express frequency. | ||
| Less shows a negative comparison. | ||
| Degree phrases can intensify the comparison. | ||
| Twice as often compares frequency exactly. |
Position And Emphasis
Comparative adverbs usually appear before the main verb, especially in neutral sentences. They can also appear at the end of the sentence for emphasis or clarity. This placement works naturally in patterns shared with Adverb Placement.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| A comparative adverb can come before the main verb. | ||
| A comparative adverb can appear at the end for emphasis. | ||
| Placement can shift the focus of the sentence. |
Equative Forms
Not every comparison uses a comparative form. Equative structures use as plus an adjective or adverb plus as to show equality instead of difference. These patterns compare actions without saying that one is greater than the other.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| As plus adverb plus as shows equality. | ||
| Equative forms do not use comparative meaning. | ||
| Equality can compare manner or degree. |
Common Contrasts
Some short adverbs overlap in form with adjectives, so meaning matters. Hard and hardly are different words, and informal speech may sometimes produce double comparatives such as more better, but standard English avoids them. These comparison patterns connect naturally with Degree Adverbs and with the wider system of comparative adjectives.
| Idea | Example | |
|---|---|---|
| Hard and hardly have different meanings. | ||
| Standard English avoids double comparatives. | ||
| Informal speech may still show double comparison. |
Review
Comparative adverbs express how one action differs from another in speed, manner, frequency, or degree. Short forms usually take -er, adverbs in -ly usually take more, and a few common forms are irregular. Comparison also relies on than, less, and equative as as patterns, while the adverb itself remains unchanged for number or gender.