Comparative & superlative

 

In the phrase above you can find what is called a comparative: langzamer. The original form langzaam is extended wit -er and because of the Dutch spelling rules (lesson 1) there's one -a- less.

Except for the one -a- thing, this is the same as what happens in English: 'thin-thinner' is in Dutch dun-dunner and even irregular forms are a lot alike: 'good-better' is in Dutch goed-beter.

And there's more good news, for the superlative is almost the same: in English you add '-est' ('thinnest'), in Dutch just -st (dunst). Usually the article het is used for the superlative (Dit boek is het dunst).

The only tricky thing, is that you have an extra -d if the word ends on a -r

More good news: the list of irregular ones is very short:

Here's a list of examples, which is at the same time a list of opposites:

adverb

comperative

superlative

goedkoop

goedkoper

goedkoopst

duur

duurder

duurst

hoog

hoger

hoogst

laag

lager

laagst

groot

groter

grootst

klein

kleiner

kleinst

schoon

schoner

schoonst

vies

viezer

viest

mooi

mooier

mooist

lelijk

lelijker

lelijkst

oud

ouder

oudst

jong

jonger

jongst

kort

korter

kortst

lang

langer

langst

moeilijk

moeilijker

moeilijkst

(ge)makkelijk

(ge)makkelijker

(ge)makkelijkst

licht

lichter

lichtst

donker

donkerder

donkerst

zwaar

zwaarder

zwaarst

heet

heter

heetst

warm

warmer

warmst

koud

kouder

koudst

slim

slimmer

slimst

dom

dommer

domst




top