Simpler or Simplest?
I could have named this post “Positive or Comparative?” and I’ve mentioned this in the past. Do a search in the upper right corner to see earlier posts.
The rule has to do with putting “-er” or “-est” at the end of an adjective. The rule is below the quote.
An author of the new Venus study told me that she’s come to the uneasy conclusion that Occam’s razor — the principle that given two conclusions the simplest one is usually correct — points to phosphine being created by life, not unknown geochemistry on Venus.
https://www.axios.com/newsletters/axios-space-ba9f4735-4119-4364-9582-3b8ea45bb8dc.html
The writer is Miriam Kramer, and I don’t know who the editor was, but here’s a picture of the scientist holding a model of phosphine:
Okay, the rule:
- When you compare two things, use the comparative; -er
- When you compare three or more things, use the superlative; -est
- When you’re not comparing but just describing, don’t put anything on the adjective.
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