Comparatives Exercises
Comparatives exercises online with answers — practise comparative adjective formation and comparative degree rules (-er and more), irregular comparatives (better, worse, further), as...as equal comparisons, comparative modifiers (much, far, a bit), and double comparatives (the more...the more). 100 multiple choice questions across 5 sets with printable PDF worksheets, from A1 to B2. 5 exercise sets with 100 questions (A1 - B2 Level).
Comparatives exercises: choose your exercise set
Start with Multiple Choice to build confidence with Comparatives exercises, or try Worksheet to practice all questions on one page.
Prefer to read first? Learn Comparatives
Basic Comparative Formation: -er and More
Comparatives Exercises
Gas Costs More Now
Read a real news story written for your level. Listen to audio, learn key vocabulary, and test yourself with comprehension exercises.
Comparative Modifiers & Less...Than
Comparatives Exercises
Gas Prices Rise Because of War
Read a real news story written for your level. Listen to audio, learn key vocabulary, and test yourself with comprehension exercises.
Why practice Comparatives exercises?
These Comparatives exercises build your skills step by step. Start with basic comparative formation — learn when to add -er (taller, bigger) and when to use more (more expensive). Then master irregular forms like better, worse, and further. You'll practise as...as for equal comparisons (as tall as, not as fast as) and learn modifiers such as much, far, slightly, and a bit to express degrees of difference. Finally, tackle double comparatives (the harder you study, the better your results) and progressive change (more and more difficult).