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A. Oldest
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B. None of these
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C. Cities
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D. World
Explanation
"Oldest" is the superlative degree of the adjective "old".
Superlative form shows the highest degree among three or more things.
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A. Smarter
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B. Smart
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C. Smartest
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Smartest" is the superlative form.
It is used to show the highest degree among three or more things.
"Smart" is the positive form.
"Smarter" is the comparative form.
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A. Taller
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B. None of these
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C. Tall
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D. Tallest
Explanation
The word "the" before the blank indicates a superlative degree.
"Tallest" is the superlative form of "tall", used to show the highest degree among all trees.
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A. Bright
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B. brighter
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C. None of these
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D. Brightest
Explanation
Brightest is an adjective which means most intelligent/most clever.
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A. The less thrilling
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B. The thrillingest
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C. None of these
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D. The most thrilling
Explanation
For adjectives like "thrilling" (with more than one syllable), the superlative is formed using "most".
So, the correct form is: "the most thrilling" — used to compare more than two things.
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A. He is the better student in class.
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B. This is the easiest test I've taken.
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C. That is the most tallest building.
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D. None of these
Explanation
This is the easiest test I've taken.
"Easiest" is the correct superlative form of the adjective "easy" (easy → easier → easiest).
The structure follows the rule: "the + superlative adjective" (e.g., the tallest, the smartest, the easiest).
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A. More interesting
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B. Interesting
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C. None of these
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D. Most interesting
Explanation
Use “most interesting” for the superlative form to compare with all other books.
It fits the phrase "ever read," implying the highest degree.
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A. Larger
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B. Largest
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C. None of these
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D. Large
Explanation
Largest is the superlative form, showing the highest degree of size.
It is used to compare one thing against all others in a group.
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A. None of these
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B. Happiest
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C. Most happier
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D. Most happy
Explanation
"Happiest" is the superlative form of "happy," used to describe the highest degree of happiness.
The superlative form is used when comparing three or more things, indicating that one has the most of the quality in question.
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A. None of these
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B. Cleverer
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C. Clever
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D. Cleverest
Explanation
"Cleverest" is the superlative form of "clever," used when comparing more than two things or people.
The phrase "of all" indicates a comparison among many, requiring the superlative degree.
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