Question 1
The train arrived _____ than the bus, so we caught our connecting flight.
Options: earlier, more early, more earlier
This is a fill-in-the-blank exercise. Click on each blank and choose the correct answer from the dropdown. Decide whether to use a comparative adjective or a comparative adverb to describe travel experiences.
Practice 2 of 2
Question 1
The train arrived _____ than the bus, so we caught our connecting flight.
Options: earlier, more early, more earlier
Question 2
Our hotel room was _____ than the photos online showed.
Options: more smaller, smaller, more small
Question 3
The tour guide explained the history _____ than our previous guide did.
Options: more clear, more clearly, clearer
Question 4
We walked _____ through the crowded market than we planned.
Options: slower, more slowly, more slow
Question 5
The mountain trail was _____ than the guidebook described.
Options: more difficult, difficulter, more difficultly
Question 6
The taxi driver drove _____ than the bus driver on our way to the airport.
Options: more fast, faster, more faster
Question 7
The second beach we visited was _____ than the first one.
Options: more clean, cleaner, more cleaner
Question 8
The customs officer checked our passports _____ than we expected.
Options: more carefully, more careful, carefuller
Question 9
The city center was _____ than the suburbs we stayed in.
Options: more busy, busier, more busier
Question 10
We traveled _____ by train than by car across the country.
Options: more comfortable, comfortabler, more comfortably
Question 11
The museum tickets were _____ than the concert tickets.
Options: more cheap, cheaper, more cheaper
Question 12
The pilot landed the plane _____ than during our previous flight.
Options: smoother, more smoothly, more smooth
Practise Comparative Adjectives vs. Adverbs - Travel Experiences with this interactive fill-in-the-blank exercise of 12 questions. Choose the option that correctly completes each sentence, then submit to check your answers and get instant feedback on every choice.
Practising grammar in real sentences — rather than memorising rules in isolation — is one of the most effective ways to make a structure stick. You can retry as many times as you like to build accuracy and confidence using Comparative Adjectives vs. Adverbs - Travel Experiences in everyday English.
Looking for more practice? See all exercises for this lesson.