REPEATED COMPARATIVES AND DOUBLE COMPARATIVES
a) …….er and …….er
To form this structure we have to add “er” to the
adjective to form a comparative adjective. It is used with adjectives and short
adverbs; such as, closer and closer, longer and longer.
Examples:
She is getting closer and closer of
her mother.
By the end of the twentieth century, couples were waiting longer and longer to
marry.
b) more and more
We can use this structure with long adjectives or
adverbs ; for example, more and more difficult, more and more slowly.
Examples:
It’s becoming more and more difficult.
He is going more and more slowly.
We don’t repeat comparative
adjectives that are used with more; we simple
say more and more:
§ Things are getting more and more
expensive.
§ This books gets more and more
interesting with every chapter.
§ He spoke for over an hour and his explanation
got more and more complicated.
Here’s a short quiz for you to test yourself. And don’t forget – keep
visiting Speakspeak.com and your English will get better and better!
1.2
DECREASING
In order to indicate that something is decreasing we can use the
following structures: fewer and fewer, less and less.
a) Fewer and fewer
It is used with countable nouns.
Example:
Fewer and
fewer children are leaving school.
b) Less and less
It is used with uncountable nouns and adjectives.
Example:
He needs less and
less money everyday.
2. Double
comparatives
Double comparatives describe a cause and effect
process. Also, they are written as a sentence with a comma separating the
cause and the effect. The structure to use them is the following:
[the + comparative form] + (subject) + (verb), [the
+ comparative form] + (subject) + (verb)]
If you want to find more information about this kind of comparative you
can check the website: https://englishwithdickandjane.wordpress.com/2012/05/16/double-comparatives-english-grammar/
Examples:
The more education women get, the later they marry.
The less children studied, the more slowly they
learned.
Using Double Comparatives
As you can see from these
examples, the format of double comparatives is as follows:
The (more
/ less) + (noun / noun phrase) subject + verb + , + the
(more / less) + (noun) subject + verb
Double comparatives with
'more' and 'less' can be used with adjectives in the same way. In this
case, the structure places the comparative adjective first:
The + comparative adjective
+ (noun) + subject + verb, the + comparative adjective + it is + infinitive
Practice Double Comparatives
Use the following sentence
segments to create double comparatives (the good kind) of your own.
- people / come / party , food / we / need
- difficult
/ test , students / study
- nice / customer service
representative / happy /
customer
- high-tech
/ car , expensive / model
- full
/ church , good / pastor
- funny
/ comic , sales / cd / have
- severe
/ judge , harsh /sentence
- experienced
/ technician , satisfying / repair
- long
/ play , bored / audience
- money
/ spend , money / save
Possible Answers
Here are some possible
answers for the exercise.
- The more people that come to the party,
the more food we will need!
- The more difficult the test is, the more
students should study.
- The nicer the customer service
representative is, the happier the customer will be.
- The more high-tech the car is, the more
expensive the modal will cost.
- The fuller the church is, the better the
pastor is.
- The funnier the comic is, the better
sales the CD will have.
- The more severe the judge, the harsher
the sentence will be.
- The more experienced the technician is,
the more satisfying the repair will be.
- The longer the play lasts, the more bored
the audience becomes.
- The more money you spend, the less money
you save.
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