The comparative form of the adjective fast (e.g., "A train is ____ than a bicycle").
Faster
The comparative form of the adjective expensive (e.g., "A laptop is ____ expensive than a smartphone").
More
The comparative form of the adjective good (e.g., "Your English is getting ____ every day").
Better
The comparative form of the adjective easy (e.g., "This grammar exercise is ____ than the previous one").
Easier
The missing word in this pattern used to show equality: "My new desk is ____ big as your desk."
As
The superlative form of the adjective tall (e.g., "He is the ____ student in our university").
Tallest
The superlative form of the adjective beautiful (e.g., "Samarkand is one of the ____ beautiful cities").
Most
The superlative form of the adjective bad (e.g., "That was the ____ presentation of the quarter").
Worst
The superlative form of the adjective happy.
Happiest
To show that two things are NOT equal, you add this negative word before the first "as" (e.g., "This laptop is ____ as fast as that one").
Not
The structural word that you must ALWAYS place right after a comparative adjective to join two things (e.g., "Python is easier ____ C++").
Than
The opposite of "more", used when you want to say something has less of a quality (e.g., "This project is ____ difficult than the last one").
Less
The comparative form of the adjective bad.
Worse
When adding "-er" or "-est" to an adjective ending in a consonant + "y", the "y" always changes into this letter.
I
Inside an "as...as" structure, the adjective must always be in its ____ form, meaning no "-er" or "more" is allowed.
Base
The specific article that you must ALWAYS place right before a superlative adjective (e.g., "This is ____ biggest office in the building").
The
The opposite of "the most", used to describe the absolute lowest degree of a long adjective.
The least
The superlative form of the adjective good.
Best
The comparative form of the adjective busy (e.g., "Our manager is ____ today than yesterday").
Busier
Correct the error in this sentence: "He is as taller as his older brother."
As tall as
The correct spelling of the comparative form for the adjective big.
Bigger
Complete the business sentence: "This is the ____ innovative software our IT department has ever created."
Most
The comparative form of the adjective far when talking about extra or additional information (e.g., "For ____ details, please email human resources").
Further
The superlative form of the adjective heavy (e.g., "This box is the ____ of all").
Heaviest
Complete the expression often used to demand something immediately: "Please reply to my email as soon ____ possible."
As