Task 2. Complete the sentences with suitable comparative forms of adverbs in the box.
traditionally soundly generously slowly healthily
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1. Can you speak ? My English is not good.
2. After a hard working day, we usually sleep .
3. Nowadays, people dress , so it’s difficult to say which country they are from.
4. It’s not always true that rich people donate than poor people.
5. If you want to stay slim, you have to eat .
Task 3. Finish the sentences below with a suitable comparative form of hard, early, late, fast, well and badly.
1. Your exam score is low. I am sure you can do .
2. We’ll be late for the fair. Can you drive ?
3. On Sunday, we can get up than usual.
4. The farmers have to work at harvest time.
5. You look tired. Are you feeling than you did this morning?
6. My mother has to get up than us to milk the cows.
Task 4. Underline the correct comparative forms to complete the sentences
1. People in rural areas of Britain talk optimistically/more optimistically about the future than city people.
2. In India, rural areas are more popularly/popular known as the ‘countryside’.
3. A village is less densely populated/more densely populated than a city.
4. City people seem to react quickly/more quickly to changes than country people.
5. Medical help can be less easily/more easily obtained in a city than in the countryside.
6. A buffalo ploughs better/more well than a horse.