For adjectives with more than two syllables, use "more" to form the comparative.
So, "more beautiful" is correct.
The adjectives follow the correct order: opinion → size → age → color → material → noun.
"Charming" (opinion), "little" (size), "old" (age), "white" (color), "stone" (material), followed by "house" (noun).
Intelligent describes the quality or characteristic of the students, making it an adjective of quality.
It provides more information about the students' intellectual traits.
'Every' is an indefinite adjective because it refers to each member of a group individually, without specifying a particular one.
It modifies the noun 'creature' in a non-specific way.
Similar examples: each, some, many, few.
"Square" describes the shape of the box, making it an adjective of shape.
Adjectives of quantity describe how much, while size refers to dimensions.
"Every" is a distributive adjective.
Because it refers to individual members of a group one at a time (e.g., "every species" emphasizes each species separately).
"Extremely catching" describes the noun "eyes," functioning as an adjective phrase.
It consists of an adverb ("extremely") modifying an adjective ("catching").
A possessive adjective shows ownership and comes before a noun.
In the sentence, "My" describes "dress", indicating possession.
The infinitive phrase "to sleep" is modifying the noun "day", telling what kind of day.
Since it describes or qualifies a noun, it functions as an adjective.
When comparing two things using an adjective with more than one syllable (like "beautiful"), we use "more" + adjective to form the comparative.
"Most beautiful" is for comparing three or more things (superlative).