Learn English – ‘Evenest’ vs ‘most even’ word usage and its history

etymologyword-choiceword-usage

When I am looking for the superlative form of 'even' which would be evenest, I was surprised that it's rarely used.
[This 'even' which means something smooth and regular]

The only source that I found the 'evenest' usage is this:

> http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/5099/pg5099-images.html

I found this:
evenest

Superlative form of even: most even

http://www.yourdictionary.com/evenest

Etymology:
[Middle English, from Old English efen.]
Source: freedictionary.com

Research about this word:

Evenest
Evenest

Most Even
Most Even

Does anyone have encountered this word both in a spoken or written form?

How do you perceive this word as native speaker, being used in everyday situation?

Which do you think is the most correct one in formal writing usage or informal spoken setting?

Thanks a lot!

Best Answer

According to dictionary.com, the comparative form is evener, which would make the superlative form evenest.

It is rare to encounter this in written or spoken form. I believe the reason for this is because even is as comparative as perfect is nowadays. In the past, one would make comparisons, evener and more perfect. Current usage tends to even as perfectly so and perfect as perfectly so without the need or ability to compare.

Here are a couple of examples using evener from dictionary.com.

The smoother and evener all brewers' casks are made on their inside the better, as they are thereby the more easily cleaned.

The small pieces, therefore, absorb the heat more evenly, and this gives an evener action of the rennet.