English edit

Adjective edit

bizarrer

  1. (rare) comparative form of bizarre: more bizarre
    • 1998 April 17, William Raspberry, “Superdistricts in North Carolina”, in The Washington Post[1]:
      Remember the North Carolina congressional district denounced by Justice Sandra Day O'Connor as unconstitutionally “bizarre”?¶ Well, things just got a little bizarrer—perhaps so bizarre that it may finally be possible to do something sensible about a serious issue of electoral equity.
    • 2002 July 31, John Kerr, “Pontiff Appeals for calm amid sex scandals”, in alt.flame[2] (Usenet):
      This whole Popage business gets bizarrer and bizarrer. Almost Pythonesque in some ways.
    • 2006, Dennis J. Brown, Dante Wilson, Micacles and Monsters[3], →ISBN, page 107:
      Something very big and very weird is coming down, Doc, and if you think all of this is bizarre, you better pull up your socks 'cause I think things are going to get a lot bizarrer before they get better.

German edit

Pronunciation edit

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Adjective edit

bizarrer

  1. comparative degree of bizarr

Adjective edit

bizarrer

  1. inflection of bizarr:
    1. strong/mixed nominative masculine singular
    2. strong genitive/dative feminine singular
    3. strong genitive plural