yearbook superlatives


Yearbook superlatives are fun awards given in high school or college yearbooks to recognize students' unique traits, achievements, or predicted futures. Common examples include "Most Likely to Succeed," "Best Dressed," "Class Clown," "Most Athletic," "Best Friends," "Most Likely to Become Famous," and "Biggest Prankster," often voted on by peers to add a lighthearted element to the yearbook.





funny yearbook superlatives


Most Likely to Become a Professional Couch Potato, Best at Procrastinating Until the Last Minute, Most Likely to Argue with Their GPS, Class Clown's Official Sidekick, Best at Eating an Entire Pizza Alone, Most Likely to Invent a Time Machine for More Sleep, Superlative for the Person Who Always Forgets Their Own Name, Most Likely to Win a Gold Medal in Napping, Best at Making Excuses for Being Late, and Most Likely to Start a Club for Introverts Who Love Memes.





most likely to yearbook funny


Most Likely To trip over their own feet in a crowded room.

Most Likely To start a food fight at a fancy dinner.

Most Likely To name their first child after a superhero.

Most Likely To accidentally join a cult while looking for a book club.

Most Likely To become a viral meme for the silliest reason.

Most Likely To talk to animals and expect a response.

Most Likely To invent a useless gadget that sells millions.

Most Likely To get lost in their own house.

Most Likely To win an award for procrastination.

Most Likely To turn every conversation into a dramatic story.





senior superlative ideas


Most Likely to Succeed, Best Dressed, Class Clown, Most Athletic, Biggest Flirt, Most Artistic, Life of the Party, Most Likely to Travel the World, Best Sense of Humor, Most Dedicated Volunteer, Ultimate Tech Whiz, Most Creative Problem Solver, Best Dancer, Most Changed Since Freshman Year, Top Foodie, Most Likely to Start a Business, Best Public Speaker, Most Musical Talent, Biggest Adventurer, Most Positive Attitude





senior superlatives for high school


Senior superlatives for high school commonly include Most Likely to Succeed, Class Clown, Best Dressed, Most Athletic, Most Artistic, Best Smile, Couple Most Likely to Marry, Most Likely to Become Famous, Biggest Flirt, Most Intelligent, Friendliest, Most Changed, Best Sense of Humor, and Most Involved.





creative senior superlatives


Most Likely to Invent a Time Machine
Biggest Procrastinator
Most Likely to Star in a Reality TV Show
Ultimate Meme Lord
Best at Napping in Class
Most Likely to Write a Bestseller
King or Queen of Pranks
Most Adventurous Eater
Super Sleuth for Solving Mysteries
Master of Selfies
Most Likely to Become a Viral Sensation
Best at Pulling All-Nighters
Ultimate Gamer
Most Creative Storyteller
Best at Making People Laugh
Most Likely to Start a Band
King or Queen of Social Media
Most Innovative Thinker
Best Dance Moves





funny superlative ideas


Most Likely to Trip Over Nothing
Biggest Procrastinator
Most Likely to Start a Food Fight
Champion of Bad Jokes
Most Likely to Forget Their Own Birthday
Best at Making Awkward Situations Worse
Most Obsessed with Social Media
Least Likely to Follow a Recipe
Most Creative Excuse Maker
Biggest Napping Expert
Most Likely to Lose Their Keys Daily
Champion of Dad Jokes
Best at Overreacting to Minor Things
Most Likely to Talk to Plants
Ultimate Meme Connoisseur





unique superlatives


Superlatives in English compare three or more items to indicate the highest or lowest degree of a quality, formed by adding "-est" to adjectives (e.g., tall → tallest) or using words like "most" or "least" for longer ones (e.g., beautiful → most beautiful). Irregular superlatives, which are unique in their forms, include:

- Good → best
- Bad → worst
- Far → farthest or furthest
- Much/many → most

Words like "unique," meaning one of a kind, are absolute adjectives and cannot be used in comparative or superlative forms (e.g., avoid "more unique" or "most unique" as they are grammatically incorrect). Other absolute adjectives, such as "perfect" or "infinite," follow similar rules. In creative or informal contexts, some misuse these for emphasis, but standard English avoids it to preserve meaning.