Ex. 3 Irregular Comparative Adjectives

Instructions: Fill in the blanks with the comparative form of the adjectives in parenthesis.

Irregular Comparative Forms

Some adjectives have irregular comparative forms.

Examples: good-better, bad-worse, little-less, many/much-more
John has more money than Albert.
This book is better than the one I read last week.
1. Helen is a (good) student than her sister.
2. The traffic today is (bad) than it was at the same time yesterday.
3. I have (little) free time than he does.
4. The Wilsons have (many) children than the Browns.
5. She wants to find a job that will pay her (much) money than she is making now.