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dårligere

Dårligere is the comparative form of the adjective meaning "bad" in Norwegian and Danish. In Norwegian Bokmål the form is dårligere, in Danish it is også dårligere, while in Norwegian Nynorsk the corresponding form is dårlegare. The word is used to describe a higher degree of bad quality or a worse condition in relation to another item.

Grammatically, dårligere (or its dialectal/nynorsk equivalent) functions as a standard comparative adjective. It is typically followed

Usage notes and nuances: dårligere conveys a direct, objective comparison of quality, rather than mere negative

Etymology and cognates: the form derives from the Germanic adjective system. Cognates appear in other Scandinavian

See also: dårlig, verifisering of comparisons, norsk grammatikk, dansk grammatikk.

by
a
comparison
marker
such
as
enn
or
end
in
the
relevant
language:
Norwegian
manuals
prefer
enn
(Denne
filmen
er
dårligere
enn
den
forrige),
Danish
commonly
uses
end
(Denne
film
er
dårligere
end
den
forrige).
The
construction
is
used
for
both
tangible
and
abstract
contrasts,
for
example
quality,
performance,
or
welfare.
evaluation.
In
some
contexts,
speakers
may
also
use
related
variants
or
synonyms,
such
as
the
adverbial
sense
of
worse
(e.g.,
det
går
verre
in
Norwegian),
which
is
not
the
same
as
the
adjective-based
comparative.
In
nynorsk,
dårlegare
follows
the
same
comparative
logic
as
dårligere,
but
with
the
nynorsk
spelling.
languages
with
parallel
formations
for
“worse”
or
“more
bad.”
The
root
word
dåleg/dårleg
sustains
the
same
semantic
field
across
Bokmål,
Nynorsk,
and
Danish.