Irregular Comparative and Superl
Swap regular 'más' forms for 'mejor', 'peor', 'mayor', or 'menor' to sound like a natural Spanish speaker.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Irregular comparatives replace 'más' with a unique word like 'mejor' or 'peor'.
- Use 'mejor' for better and 'peor' for worse; never add 'más' before them.
- Use 'mayor' for older and 'menor' for younger when discussing people's ages.
- Superlatives are formed by adding 'el', 'la', 'los', or 'las' before the comparative.
Quick Reference
| Adjective | Comparative | Superlative | English Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bueno/a | Mejor | El/la mejor | Better / The best |
| Malo/a | Peor | El/la peor | Worse / The worst |
| Grande | Mayor | El/la mayor | Older / The oldest |
| Pequeño/a | Menor | El/la menor | Younger / The youngest |
| Mucho | Más | El/la más | More / The most |
| Poco | Menos | El/la menos | Less / The least |
关键例句
3 / 8Este café es mejor que el otro.
This coffee is better than the other one.
Mi hermana es menor que yo.
My sister is younger than me.
Es un problema de mayor importancia.
It is a problem of greater importance.
The 'Más' Trap
Never put 'más' before 'mejor' or 'peor'. It's like putting a hat on a hat. One is enough!
Plural Power
Don't forget to add an 'es' if you are talking about multiple things. 'Mis gatos son los mejores'.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Irregular comparatives replace 'más' with a unique word like 'mejor' or 'peor'.
- Use 'mejor' for better and 'peor' for worse; never add 'más' before them.
- Use 'mayor' for older and 'menor' for younger when discussing people's ages.
- Superlatives are formed by adding 'el', 'la', 'los', or 'las' before the comparative.
Overview
You already know how to compare things in Spanish. Usually, you just add más or menos. It is simple and predictable. But some words like to be different. They have their own special forms. Think of them as the VIPs of Spanish grammar. They do not follow the standard rules. They have their own unique style. Today, we are meeting these rebels. They are essential for daily life. You will use them to talk about family. You will use them to pick the best wine. Let's dive in!
How This Grammar Works
In English, we have irregulars too. We do not say "gooder." We say "better." Spanish does the exact same thing. Instead of adding más to every word, we swap it. The word changes its entire shape. It feels like a magic trick. You take a basic adjective like bueno. You transform it into mejor. No más is required. It is faster and more natural. Native speakers use these constantly. If you use them correctly, you sound fluent. If you use them wrong, people still understand. But you might get a polite smile. It is like wearing socks with sandals. It works, but it looks a bit funny.
Formation Pattern
- 1There are four main pairs you must learn. They are the core of irregular comparisons.
- 2For quality:
bueno(good) becomesmejor(better).malo(bad) becomespeor(worse). - 3For age:
viejo(old) becomesmayor(older).joven(young) becomesmenor(younger). - 4For size (sometimes):
grande(big) becomesmayor(greater/older).pequeño(small) becomesmenor(lesser/younger). - 5To make them superlatives, just add the article. Use
el,la,los, orlasbefore the comparative word. For example,el mejormeans "the best."
When To Use It
Use these when you want to be precise. Use mejor and peor for quality. Imagine you are at a restaurant. You try two different tacos. One is clearly superior. You say, "Este taco es mejor." Use mayor and menor for your siblings. If your brother was born before you, he is your hermano mayor. It does not mean he is physically bigger. It means he has been on Earth longer. Use these in job interviews too. You can talk about your mejor skill. It shows confidence and linguistic control. Use them when comparing movies or weather. "Este clima es peor que el de ayer."
When Not To Use It
Do not use these for physical size alone. If you see a big house, use más grande. If you see a small cat, use más pequeño. Mayor and menor usually imply importance or age. Do not use más with these irregular forms. Never say más mejor. That is a huge red flag. It is like saying "more better" in English. Your Spanish teacher might faint if they hear it. Also, do not use them for feelings like "happy" or "sad." Those stay regular. You are más feliz, not mejor feliz.
Common Mistakes
People love to say más mejor. It is the most common error. It feels natural because you want to emphasize. But mejor already includes the "more" part. Another mistake is using más grande for age. In English, we say "big brother." In Spanish, we say hermano mayor. If you say hermano grande, people think he is a giant. They might expect a professional wrestler to walk in. Watch out for gender and number. These words must match the noun. Mejor becomes mejores for plural things. El mejor libro but las mejores pizzas.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
Regular comparisons use más + adjective + que. For example: más rápido que. Irregular comparisons skip the más. You just say mejor que. Notice the que stays the same. It is the bridge between the two things. Superlatives also look similar. Regular: el más rápido. Irregular: el mejor. The structure is actually simpler once you memorize the four words. Think of it like a grammar shortcut. You are taking the express lane instead of the local road.
Quick FAQ
Q. Can I ever say más bueno?
A. Yes, but only for food taste sometimes. Mejor is safer.
Q. Is mayor only for people?
A. Mostly, but also for abstract things like "greater importance."
Q. Do these words have feminine forms?
A. No, mejor, peor, mayor, and menor end in 'r'. They work for both genders. Just change the article: el mejor or la mejor.
Q. How do I say "the worst"?
A. Use el peor or la peor.
Reference Table
| Adjective | Comparative | Superlative | English Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bueno/a | Mejor | El/la mejor | Better / The best |
| Malo/a | Peor | El/la peor | Worse / The worst |
| Grande | Mayor | El/la mayor | Older / The oldest |
| Pequeño/a | Menor | El/la menor | Younger / The youngest |
| Mucho | Más | El/la más | More / The most |
| Poco | Menos | El/la menos | Less / The least |
The 'Más' Trap
Never put 'más' before 'mejor' or 'peor'. It's like putting a hat on a hat. One is enough!
Plural Power
Don't forget to add an 'es' if you are talking about multiple things. 'Mis gatos son los mejores'.
Size Matters
If you are talking about the physical size of a box, 'más grande' is perfect. 'Mayor' is for age or importance.
Polite Aging
Using 'personas mayores' is a very polite way to say 'elderly people' in Spanish-speaking countries.
例句
8Este café es mejor que el otro.
Focus: mejor
This coffee is better than the other one.
Use 'mejor' instead of 'más bueno'.
Mi hermana es menor que yo.
Focus: menor
My sister is younger than me.
Use 'menor' for age, not 'más pequeña'.
Es un problema de mayor importancia.
Focus: mayor
It is a problem of greater importance.
Mayor can mean 'greater' in abstract contexts.
Buscamos la mejor solución para la empresa.
Focus: la mejor
We are looking for the best solution for the company.
Superlative 'la mejor' shows high quality.
✗ Este libro es más mejor. → ✓ Este libro es mucho mejor.
Focus: mucho mejor
This book is much better.
Never use 'más' with 'mejor'. Use 'mucho' to emphasize.
✗ Soy más grande que mi hermano. → ✓ Soy mayor que mi hermano.
Focus: mayor
I am older than my brother.
Use 'mayor' for age, 'más grande' implies physical size.
Son los peores resultados del año.
Focus: los peores
They are the worst results of the year.
Peor becomes plural 'peores' to match 'resultados'.
Tus ideas son mejores que las mías.
Focus: mejores
Your ideas are better than mine.
Mejor matches the plural noun 'ideas'.
自我测试
Choose the correct irregular comparative for age.
Juan tiene 10 años y su hermano tiene 15. Juan es ___ que su hermano.
While 'más joven' is grammatically okay, 'menor' is the specific irregular form for comparing ages.
Complete the superlative sentence.
Esta es ___ película de toda la historia.
We use 'la mejor' for 'the best'. 'Más mejor' is always incorrect.
Compare the quality of two items.
El clima hoy es ___ que ayer. ¡Hay una tormenta!
The irregular form of 'malo' is 'peor'. Never say 'más peor'.
🎉 得分: /3
视觉学习工具
Regular vs. Irregular
Choosing the Right Word
Is it about age?
Is the person older?
Use 'mayor'
Usage Scenarios
Family
- • Hermano mayor
- • Hija menor
Reviews
- • La mejor pizza
- • El peor servicio
常见问题
20 个问题It means 'better'. You use it when one thing has more quality than another, like Este vino es mejor.
Usually no. If you say Él es más bueno, it implies he is a kinder person, but Él es mejor implies he is better at a skill.
Just add the article: el mejor, la mejor, los mejores, or las mejores.
They mean the same thing, but peor is much more common and sounds more natural in 99% of cases.
No, these four words stay the same for masculine and feminine. You only change the article, like el mejor and la mejor.
Just add -es to the end. For example, mejor becomes mejores and mayor becomes mayores.
Absolutely not! Even if you are very excited, más mejor is a major grammar crime.
Use mayor for age (older brother) and más grande for physical size (bigger house).
No, you can use it for anything involving age or rank, like un delito menor (a minor crime).
Yes! You can use mucho to emphasize. Este libro es mucho mejor is perfectly correct.
Yes, it is el más or la más. For example, Ella es la que más trabaja (She is the one who works the most).
Yes, in the phrase cuando sea mayor, it means 'when I am an adult' or 'when I grow up'.
Use peor que. For example, Lunes es peor que viernes (Monday is worse than Friday).
Sometimes in math or formal logic, but in daily life, it almost always refers to being younger.
Actually, más is the comparative of mucho. It is irregular because we don't say muchoer!
Yes, if you feel sicker, you can say Me siento peor hoy.
Use el mejor de for superlatives (the best of the group) and mejor que for comparisons (better than).
Yes, children often say más bueno before they learn the irregular forms, just like English-speaking kids say gooder.
These are the main ones for A2 level. Others exist but are very rare or used in specific technical fields.
Think of them in pairs: Good/Bad (Mejor/Peor) and Old/Young (Mayor/Menor). They are opposites!
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