which sentence makes a logical comparison?
We thought Kelly's office was most colorful than any office.
We thought Kelly's office was more colorful than any other office.
We thought Kelly's office was more colorful than any office.
We thought Kelly's office was most colorful than any other office.

Respuesta :

Answer:

Number 3 and 4 don't make sense.

Number 2 includes the word other, making it flow smoother than the rest when you say it aloud.  

Explanation:

Answer:

B

Explanation:

The word "most" is the superlative, which means that it's the utmost one. In other words, you only use "most" of any other such superlative word when you say something like "her office was the most". Usually, "the" precedes a superlative. Since none of the sentences with "most" have "the", eliminate A and D.

"More" is a little different from "most" in that it is the comparative. It's like "good, better, best", and "more" is the "better" (hope this analogy makes sense). Similar to how "most" goes with "the", "more" and any other comparative often go with "other" because you're comparing two things. Since C doesn't have "other", we can eliminate it.

Thus the answer is B.

Hope this helps!