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Comparative and Superlative: Learn how to express “more” (comparative) and “most” (superlative) in Chinese using 更 (gèng) and 最 (zuì) with adjectives

1 Basic Grammar Concepts

In Chinese, 更 (gèng) is used to indicate that the degree is higher (comparative – “more”), and 最 (zuì) is used to indicate the highest degree (superlative – “most”).

Both words precede the Adjectives, which are also known as Stative Verbs in Chinese grammar.

Key Differences Between 更 and 最

更 (gèng)
更 + Adjective
Comparative degree
“More” / “-er”
Higher degree than something else
最 (zuì)
最 + Adjective
Superlative degree
“Most” / “-est”
Highest degree in a group

Important Grammar Rule

Both 更 (gèng) and 最 (zuì) must be placed directly before the adjective they modify:

Correct:
更 好喝
gèng hǎohē
more delicious (to drink)
Incorrect:
好喝 更
hǎohē gèng
(Adjective cannot come before 更)

Remember: The word order is always: 更/最 + Adjective (Stative Verb)

2 更 (gèng) – Comparative Degree

更 (gèng) means “more” and is used to make comparative statements. It indicates that something has a higher degree of a quality compared to something else.

The typical structure involves two subjects being compared, with the second one having a higher degree of the quality.

S1 + AdjS2 + + Adj

Comparative Degree Visualization

Base Item
咖啡
coffee
Comparative Item
tea

Complete Sentence: 咖啡好喝,茶更好喝。
(Coffee is good to drink. Tea is even better.)

Examples with 更 (gèng)

Structure Chinese English Translation Audio
S1 + Adj,S2 + 更 + Adj
咖啡好喝好喝
kāfēi hǎohē, chá gèng hǎohē.
Coffee is good to drink. Tea is even better.
S1 + Adj,S2 + 更 + Adj
北京西安
běijīng , xī’ān gèng .
Beijing is hot. Xi’an is hotter.
S1 + Adj,S2 + 更 + Adj
苹果西瓜
píngguǒ tián, xīguā gèng tián.
Apples are sweet. Watermelon is sweeter.

Comparison Structure

更 is used in explicit comparisons between two items:

Pattern: Item A has quality → Item B has more quality
咖啡好喝,茶更好喝。
Coffee is delicious, tea is more delicious.
Key characteristics:
  • Two items being compared.
  • Second item has higher degree.
  • First clause establishes baseline.
  • Second clause uses 更 for comparison.

Usage Notes

更 can also be used without explicit comparison when context is clear:

With context:
昨天的天气热,今天更热。
Yesterday’s weather was hot, today is hotter.
Implicit comparison:
这个苹果更甜。
This apple is sweeter. (Implied: than that one)

更 emphasizes “even more” or “to a greater degree.”

3 最 (zuì) – Superlative Degree

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Practice Exercises

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