With adverbs ending in 
-ly, you must use 
more to form the comparative, and 
most to form the superlative. 
| Adverb | Comparative | Superlative | 
|---|
| quietly | more quietly | most quietly | 
| slowly | more slowly | most slowly | 
| seriously | more seriously | most seriously | 
  Examples
-    The teacher spoke more slowly to help us to understand.
-    Could you sing more quietly please?
With short adverbs that do not end in 
-ly comparative and superlative forms are identical to adjectives: add 
-er to form the comparative and 
-est to form the superlative. If the adverb ends in 
e, remove it before adding the ending. 
| Adverb | Comparative | Superlative | 
|---|
| hard | harder | hardest | 
| fast | faster | fastest | 
| late | later | latest | 
  Examples
-    Jim works harder than his brother.
-    Everyone in the race ran fast, but John ran the fastest of all.
Some adverbs have irregular comparative and superlative forms. 
| Adverb | Comparative | Superlative | 
|---|
| badly | worse | worst | 
| far | farther/further | farthest/furthest | 
| little | less | least | 
| well | better | best | 
  Examples
-    The little boy ran farther than his friends.
-    You're driving worse today than yesterday !
-    He played the best of any player.
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