Più...di, meno...di, tanto...quanto · The relative superlative (il più...) · The absolute superlative (-issimo) · Irregular forms: migliore, peggiore, maggiore, minore
CEFR Level A2A2 · Lesson 2 of 8By the end of this lesson you will be able to:
Italian has three types of comparison: more than, less than, and as...as. All three follow simple, consistent patterns.
più + adjective + di/che — more... than
meno + adjective + di/che — less... than
(così) + adjective + come or tanto + adjective + quanto — as... as
| Italian | English |
|---|---|
| Marco è più alto di Luca. | Marco is taller than Luca. |
| Roma è meno grande di Londra. | Rome is smaller (less big) than London. |
| Sofia è (così) intelligente come sua sorella. | Sofia is as smart as her sister. |
| Questo caffè è tanto forte quanto quello. | This coffee is as strong as that one. |
This is the one tricky part of comparatives: knowing whether "than" translates to di or che.
Use di when comparing two different nouns or pronouns on the same quality.
Use che when comparing two adjectives, verbs, nouns of the same type, or prepositional phrases within the same subject.
| Italian | English |
|---|---|
| Marco è più alto di Luca. | Marco is taller than Luca. (two people) |
| Il treno è più veloce della macchina. | The train is faster than the car. (two things) |
| Italian | English |
|---|---|
| Marco è più simpatico che intelligente. | Marco is more nice than smart. (two adjectives, same person) |
| Preferisco leggere che guardare la TV. | I prefer reading to watching TV. (two verbs) |
| C'è più traffico in città che in periferia. | There's more traffic downtown than in the suburbs. (two places, same category) |
The relative superlative singles out the most (or least) of a group — "the tallest," "the least expensive."
definite article + (noun) + più/meno + adjective + di
Marco è il più alto della classe. — Marco is the tallest in the class.
È la città più bella d'Italia. — It's the most beautiful city in Italy.
Questo è il ristorante meno caro del quartiere. — This is the least expensive restaurant in the neighbourhood.
The absolute superlative doesn't compare to anything — it just means "extremely" or "very, very." It's one of the most useful and distinctively Italian constructions you'll learn.
Drop the final vowel of the adjective and add -issimo / -issima / -issimi / -issime (agreeing like a normal -o adjective).
| Adjective | -issimo form | English |
|---|---|---|
| bello | bellissimo | extremely beautiful |
| buono | buonissimo | extremely good |
| caro | carissimo | extremely expensive / dear |
| facile | facilissimo | extremely easy |
| interessante | interessantissimo | extremely interesting |
| stanco | stanchissimo | extremely tired |
Four common adjectives have special irregular comparative/superlative forms — alongside the regular forms, which also exist and are still used.
| Adjective | Comparative | Superlative |
|---|---|---|
| buono (good) | migliore (better) | il migliore / ottimo (the best / excellent) |
| cattivo (bad) | peggiore (worse) | il peggiore / pessimo (the worst / terrible) |
| grande (big) | maggiore (bigger/older) | il maggiore / massimo (the biggest / maximum) |
| piccolo (small) | minore (smaller/younger) | il minore / minimo (the smallest / minimum) |
Italians have a word for intense local pride: campanilismo, from campanile (bell tower) — loyalty to your own town's bell tower over everyone else's. It shows up constantly in comparative conversation: whose region has the best food, whose city has the most beautiful piazza, whose football team is better.
This is exactly where comparatives and superlatives get real workout in everyday Italian — La pizza napoletana è la migliore d'Italia (Neapolitan pizza is the best in Italy) is a sentence you'll hear (and probably get into friendly arguments about) constantly, especially between people from different regions.
Fill in the correct comparison word:
1. di (two people) 2. che (two nouns, same category)
3. che (two verbs) 4. di (two cities) 5. che (two adjectives)
Rewrite using -issimo:
1. bellissima 2. stanchissimo 3. facilissimo
4. lunghissimo 5. interessantissimi
Fill in the correct irregular comparative or superlative:
1. migliore di 2. peggiore
3. maggiore 4. minore
1. Questa città è più bella di quella.
2. È il ragazzo più alto della classe.
3. Questa torta è buonissima!
4. Ho meno tempo di te.
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