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Longer

Longer is the comparative form of the adjective long. It is used to indicate greater length, distance, duration, or extent relative to something else. As an adjective, it describes a noun (a longer rope; a longer road). As an adverb, it can modify a verb to express greater duration (We waited longer).

Etymology and form: Longer derives from the Old English word for long, with a comparative ending that

Usage notes: Longer is used across physical and temporal senses. It appears in comparisons with than (longer

Related forms and contrasts: The opposite of longer is shorter (the comparative form of short). The superlative

Examples: The bridge is longer than the river. We decided to take the longer route. He stayed

evolved
into
the
modern
-er
form.
The
standard
comparative
is
longer,
and
the
superlative
is
longest.
In
contemporary
English,
the
form
more
long
is
not
used
for
this
sense.
than),
in
noun
phrases
(a
longer
version,
a
longer
day),
and
with
prepositional
phrases
to
indicate
duration
(for
a
longer
period).
It
can
describe
abstract
extents
as
well,
such
as
a
longer
wait
or
a
longer
life.
While
longer
often
implies
extension
beyond
a
reference
point,
it
does
not
inherently
specify
whether
the
increase
is
beneficial
or
burdensome;
context
determines
connotation.
form
is
longest.
Synonyms
include
extended,
elongated,
protracted,
and
prolonged,
depending
on
nuance.
Common
antonyms
focus
on
reduced
length
or
duration.
longer
than
anyone
else.
This
edition
is
a
longer
version
of
the
book.
In
these
contexts,
longer
communicates
greater
measurement
or
persistence
compared
with
a
baseline.