"More fun" or "funnier"?
"More fun" or "funnier"?
What are the comparative and superlative of the adjective "fun"? I'd say "more fun" and "most fun"...
But I'm somehow slightly tempted by "funnier" and "funniest", which should be for "funny" though, not "fun"...
I didn't find anything about this in the main dictionaries.
funny (the adjective) -> funnier
fun (the noun) -> more fun
16 0 ReplyWhich, by implication, means you can technically have "funnier fun" but not "more funnier" but should probably avoid both of these strange constructs.
5 0 ReplyThank you! I found and interesting note about "fun" (and also "funner", towards the end) in Gilman – I'm including a snapshot for the curious. "Funny" appears too :)
3 0 ReplyTrue. But people do say "funner" informally. "Darts are funner than bowling."
4 3 ReplyYeah, languages are living things. That makes them so much fun.
9 0 ReplyPeople say 'snuck', too. This is how languages go off the rails and acquire exceptions people complain about.
3 0 Reply
"More funner", keep 'em on their toes.
5 0 Reply😂 This is the way!
1 0 Reply