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Spanish Comparatives and Superlatives

Talking about what's Good, Better and Best


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Understanding Comparatives and Superlatives

Now let’s take a breather and go to something easier and more fun! Let’s talk about the best band of all time, who is the oldest person in your class, and how your friend’s car compares with yours. You can compare things just as easily in Spanish as you can in English.

You should already be familiar with the concept of good, better, and best. When you’re talking about one thing, it’s good. When you’re comparing it to something else, it’s better. When you say that it is better than anything else, it’s the best.

If you understand this, you already know what a comparative and a superlative are.

-Words that compare one thing to another (e.g., better, older) are called comparatives.

- Words that put something at the top or bottom of the class, so to speak, (e.g., best, oldest) are called superlatives.

Below are some common comparatives and superlatives in Spanish. Look at the table and follow each word from left to right.

Adjective
Translation
Comparative
Translation
Superlative
Translation
bueno
good
mejor que
better
el / la mejor
the best
malo
bad
peor que
worse
el / la peor
the worst
viejo
old
mayor que
older
el / la mayor
the oldest
joven
young
menor que
younger
el / la menor
the youngest

(You should also know that bien and mal share the same construction as bueno and malo.)

Let’s say that you want to talk about your favorite soccer team.

Mi equipo de fúbol favorito es muy bueno.
My favorite soccer team is very good.

Say that you want to claim that your favorite soccer team is better than your friend’s.

Mi equipo de fútbol favorito es mejor que el tuyo.
My favorite soccer team is better than yours.

Now, say that you want to boast that your soccer team is the best of all!

¡Mi equipo de fútbol es el mejor!
My soccer team is the best!

 

For Better or for Worse: MEJOR QUE and PEOR QUE

When you want to compare the age (older, younger) or quality (better, best) of two things, you will use the comparative form of the adjective plus than. For example:

  • better than = mejor que
  • worse than = peor que
  • older than = mayor que
  • younger than = menor que

If you want to say, for example, that your sister is older than you are, you will say, “Mi hermana es mayor que mí.

Por ejemplo:

 

The Best of All: LA MEJOR

If you want to say that your sister is the oldest in your family, you will simply add the article “the” to the comparative form of the adjective. The sentence becomes: “Mi hermana es la mayor.

Por ejemplo:

You will notice that the word de is often used with superlatives. When used after a superlative, de can mean “in” or “of.”

Por ejemplo:

1. El jugador es el mejor de todos.
- The player is the best of all.
2. Lupe es la mejor trabajadora del grupo.
- Lupe is the best worker in the group.

Notice that in the second example, de has combined with el to form del. This is identical to the formation of al from a and el. Anytime you see de and el together, remember:

de + el = del

 

The Most of All: MÁS DE

You can also form superlatives by talking about the strongest, coolest, fastest thing of all. Whereas you form these superlatives in English by adding an –est to the end of the adjective or adverb, you form them in Spanish by using the word más instead.

Más means most. If you wish to talk about “the hottest day of the summer” in Spanish, you’ll have to say “the day most hot of the summer.” Sound strange?

Remember that in English, not all adjectives can be transformed with an –est ending. You can’t say “beautifulest” or “expensivest”! In those cases, you form the superlative just as it is done in Spanish: you talk about the “most beautiful” or the “most expensive.”

That’s exactly how it’s done in Spanish. All other superlatives will be formed using the sentence construction below.

noun + “más” + adjective or adverb + “de” + noun

In Spanish, then, the phrase “the hottest day of the summer” will become:

el día + más + caluroso + del + verano

Por ejemplo:

 

Super Cool: The Ending -ísimo

In Spanish, there’s another way of expressing how something is just the “most-est.” You can intensify the meaning of any adjective by adding the ending -ísimo.

This is the English equivalent adding a “very” or “super” before the adjective.


Por ejemplo:

 

Some More Comparisons: MÁS QUE and MENOS QUE

Other comparisons you will make will be of the greater and lesser sort. In other words, you will say that something has more or less of a quality than the other thing. For example,

• Julie has more pens than Matt.
• San Francisco has fewer people than Los Angeles.
• When it comes to shoes, Annette has more than her sister.

Notice that the words “more” and “less” are followed by a “than.” In Spanish, it’s just the same, but instead of talking about “more than” you will talk about más que.

más que = more (or greater) than
menos que = less (or fewer) than


Por ejemplo:


 

Expressing How Things are Alike: TAN COMO and TANTO COMO

You can also use comparatives to describe how similar two things are. For example, you might wish to say:

• You’re as nice as your sister.
• I have as many toys as you.

Expressions like tan … como and tanto … como help you do that.

When you compare two things that are similar in English, you often use as … as, whether or not the word that the two things have in common is a noun, adjective, or adverb. In Spanish, however, there is a distinction.

- Use tan … como for “as … as” when the characteristic in common is an adjective or adverb.

- Use tanto … como for “as many … as” or “as much … as,” when the characteristic in common is a noun.

Go back and look at the sample sentences in English above. Can you guess which would use tan … como and which would use tanto … como?

• Eres tan amable como tu hermana. (“nice” is an adjective)
• Tengo tantos juguetes como tú. (“toys” is a noun)

Remember that the word tanto must reflect the gender and quantity of the noun it describes.

• Tengo tanto dinero como él.
• Ella tiene tantos zapatos como su amiga.
• Nosotros tenemos tanta comida como los otros.
• Ustedes tienen tantas cosas como nosotros.


In the next section we’ll work on Spanish Conjunctions: If, Ands, Buts.


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