Comparative and Superlative Adjectives and Adverbs – English Grammar Test for B1

Grammar » Grammar Test for B1 » Comparative and Superlative Adjectives and Adverbs – English Grammar Test for B1

Tests:   1234567891011

1 She is more taller than her sister.

2 This exercise is the most easiest in the book.

3 He runs more fast than his brother.

4 My car is expensiver than yours.

5 This is the baddest restaurant in town.

6 The Mount Everest is the highest mountain in the world.

7 Peter drives more careful than John.

8 Today is more colder than yesterday.

9 She sings the most best in the class.

10 This house is comfortabler than that one.

11 He arrived the earliestest of all.

12 The test was more easier than I thought.

13 Your story is funnyer than mine.

14 She is the most cleverest student in the group.

15 This lesson is more simple than the last one.

16 No other city is more biggest than Tokyo.

17 He works more harder than his brother.

18 The weather is getting more and more bad.

19 My bag is heavilier than yours.

20 She runs fastest than anyone else.

21 This is the less interesting book I have read.

22 He speaks English most fluently than his classmates.

23 Sarah is the beautifullest girl in her class.

24 This road is narrowest than the other one.

25 He jumped the most highest in the competition.

26 The film was interestinger than the book.

27 He plays football gooder than Tom.

28 This train is fastly than the bus.

29 My father is the most oldest in his family.

30 The soup tastes more well than the salad.

Answer

1 Correction: She is taller than her sister. – avoid double comparative.
2 Correction: This exercise is the easiest in the book. – only one superlative.
3 Correction: He runs faster than his brother. – correct comparative of “fast.”
4 Correction: My car is more expensive than yours. – long adjective uses “more.”
5 Correction: This is the worst restaurant in town. – irregular superlative of “bad.”
6 Correction: Mount Everest is the highest mountain in the world. – no “the” before proper noun.
7 Correction: Peter drives more carefully than John. – adverb needs “-ly.”
8 Correction: Today is colder than yesterday. – don’t use “more” with short adj.
9 Correction: She sings the best in the class. – irregular superlative.
10 Correction: This house is more comfortable than that one. – long adjective.
11 Correction: He arrived the earliest of all. – no double superlative.
12 Correction: The test was easier than I thought. – no “more” with short adj.
13 Correction: Your story is funnier than mine. – correct spelling change.
14 Correction: She is the cleverest student in the group. – avoid “most + -est.”
15 Correction: This lesson is simpler than the last one. – one-syllable adj “simple.”
16 Correction: No other city is bigger than Tokyo. – no “more + -est.”
17 Correction: He works harder than his brother. – avoid double comparative.
18 Correction: The weather is getting worse and worse. – irregular comparative.
19 Correction: My bag is heavier than yours. – y → ier spelling rule.
20 Correction: She runs faster than anyone else. – comparative, not superlative.
21 Correction: This is the least interesting book I have read. – “least,” not “less.”
22 Correction: He speaks English more fluently than his classmates. – comparative adverb.
23 Correction: Sarah is the most beautiful girl in her class. – correct form of “beautiful.”
24 Correction: This road is narrower than the other one. – spelling rule (w → er).
25 Correction: He jumped the highest in the competition. – only one superlative.
26 Correction: The film was more interesting than the book. – correct long adjective.
27 Correction: He plays football better than Tom. – irregular comparative of “well.”
28 Correction: This train is faster than the bus. – comparative of “fast.”
29 Correction: My father is the oldest in his family. – avoid “most + -est.”
30 Correction: The soup tastes better than the salad. – irregular comparative of “well/good.”

Tests:   1234567891011

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