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I have met the following expression:
It is best not to do something.
The issue is I thought that with the superlative form of an adverb we should use the article "the" ("the most" or "the best", e.g.).
Could anybody explain why we can omit "the" here?
Took me a while to see how this answer does in fact extend to other examples where "best" is used without "the": the deciding part is if the noun becomes "definite in [the] context", not whether or not there's a real noun. – Dan Getz – 2016-01-03T05:07:19.850
@DanGetz -- maybe you could post an additional answer explaining this point. – CowperKettle – 2016-01-03T05:13:06.047