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- Can I say more funny or most funny instead of funnier or funniest?
Remember Gladstone's Conservative Peroration this time last year! So in answer to your question, you most certainly can choose to use "more funny" or "most funny" instead of "funnier" or "funniest," and not be alone and unprecedented in your word choice But as you know, the overwhelming tendency in English runs in the other direction
- Funnier VS more fun | UsingEnglish. com ESL Forum
1 funny - funnier - (the) funniest - 'funny' is an adjective 2 much fun - more fun - (the) most fun - 'fun' is a noun modified by 'much' When the 'fun' is used as an adjective, its comparative and superlative would be: fun - funner - funnest I agree with SoothingDave that 'fun' and 'funny' are two different words
- What is the superlative of fun? [closed] - English Language Usage . . .
2 Funniest is the superlative of funny (and funnier is the comparative) This is not "for lack of one"; "funniest" is the superlative Funny forms its superlative and comparative according to the standard rule (as in red, redder, reddest and fast, faster, fastest)
- grammar - Is “funner” a word or not? - English Language Usage . . .
I tried searching it up and it said yes “funner” is a word, but when I ask teacher they said no it isn’t a word, anyone got an idea?
- comparisons - What is compared in than I thought? - English . . .
3 The game is funnier than I thought That is, The game is funnier than the assumed imagined game in my mind before I actually experienced the actual game
- grammar - Funnily enough or Funny enough - English Language Usage . . .
The problem is the two meanings of "funnily" OED: Funnily 1: In an amusing or humorous manner; comically 1929 Manitoba Free Press 19 Nov 19 2 [The play] is produced against settings that are very graceful Starts funnily and ends more funnily OED: Funnily 2 Strangely, oddly, curiously; surprisingly Also frequently as a sentence adverb Originally and chiefly in funnily enough 1993 Daily
- sentence - Is saying, This is funnier too incorrect? - English . . .
Regardless of context, is the sentence itself correct? What I said was something along the lines of, "This is smarter, and it is funnier too "
- Word or expression for something thats very funny, but doesnt make . . .
3 I'm sure you know of this feeling When you find something very funny, but it doesn't make you laugh out loud Perhaps it's even "funnier" than other things that make you chuckle profusely What is a word to refer to this phenomenon specifically? If not a word, then an expression is also acceptable
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