adjectives - What is the correct usage of worse and worst . . . The way I understand it, 'worse' is for comparisons, and 'worst' is the superlative But more and more I see people using them in the exact opposite positions That's the worse thing I've ever seen This can't get any worst This specific thing seems to occur a lot more than any mistakes, so I'm wondering what's up with this
Which is the correct idiom – When worst comes to worst or When worse . . . Third, although "worse comes to worse"—the blue line—is still the least popular form of the three its frequency has steadily increased since about 1940, and it is now serious contender in the race for "the correct way to spell the idiom "
Word for a cycle where the cause is made worse by the effect 16 What is the word for a cycle where the cause is made worse by the effect? A very simple example is a decline in fish leads to a decline in coral reef health which then leads to a further decline in fish and so on
Single word to describe make something worse In a technical report: One setting causes a problem to arise Another setting causes this negative effect to get worse For example:" When setting the switch to "magic" the runtime increased Hitt
Is there a name for letting something get worse until it is so bad it . . . It may pertain to the maxim " the worse, the better ", often attributed to Vladimir Lenin in the years before the Communist Revolution There is a related philosophical idea: the modern (Hegelian Marxist) use of the term dialectic Hegel's idea was that each concept or position, theoretical as well as practical, continues to develope until it becomes useless and corrupt - entangled in its own
Can I use worse, worst instead of badder, baddest? Ooh! - You are awful! I don't think I've ever encountered this kind of "slang semantic inversion" with worse, worst But I'm an ole fart, so I think badder, baddest = better, best just sounds stupid anyway