* Degrees of Comparison: We use degrees of comparison (positive, comparative, superlative) to compare adjectives and adverbs, not nouns.
* Positive: Describes a quality directly (e.g., "big," "fast," "beautiful").
* Comparative: Compares two things (e.g., "bigger," "faster," "more beautiful").
* Superlative: Compares three or more things (e.g., "biggest," "fastest," "most beautiful").
* Nouns: Nouns are words that name people, places, things, or ideas. They don't inherently have degrees of comparison.
Example:
You can say: "This is the biggest house," but you can't say "This is the biggest house than that one" (because "house" is a noun, not an adjective).
To fix the question:
You might want to ask:
* "Which adjective has the highest degree of comparison when comparing three or more nouns?" The answer would be the superlative form of the adjective.
* "Which adjective is most appropriate for comparing the size of three or more houses?" This would depend on the context and the specific houses you are comparing.
Let me know if you have a different question in mind!