How to form the comparative forms of adverbs
Some adverbs recognize degrees of comparison.
Adverbs consisting of one or two syllables form their comparative and superlative forms by adding –er and –est.
Examples are given below.
Long -> longer -> longest
Fast -> faster -> fastest
Early -> earlier -> earliest
Some adverbs have irregular forms for the comparative and the superlative.
Examples are:
Well -> better -> best
Late -> later -> latest
Little -> less -> least
Much -> more -> most
Adverbs with three or more syllables form their comparative and superlative forms by adding ‘more’ and ‘most’.
Examples
Beautifully -> more beautifully -> most beautifully
Conveniently -> more conveniently -> most conveniently
The use of the degrees of comparison
Positive
To make comparisons using positive adverbs we use the structure as…as…
Women can work as efficiently as men.
In negative comparisons not so/as…as is used.
He does not work as / so efficiently as his brother.
Comparative
The performance ended later than we thought.
He scored faster than his partner did.
Superlatives
Of all the participants, she spoke the most fluently.
Adverb phrases
There are many established adverb phrases in English.
They are:
at random, of course, at length, in fact, in general, in short, in particular, in vain, after all, at first, at last, at best, at present, in future, by all means, by no means, by the way, by the by, upside down, up and down, to and fro, here and there, in and out, now and then, off and on, by and by etc.