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What is For the better or worse? - English Language Usage Stack . . . The idiom is "for better or worse" - is it this you mean? If so, it just expresses this: If a situation exists or happens for better or for worse, it exists or happens whether its results are good or bad See here This comes from an idiom "for the better worse", which means "to produce improvement decline" If this is not what you are looking for, there is a phrase "for the better part
Is worser correct grammatically? - English Language Usage Stack . . . 4 Worser is wrong You wouldn't say "betterer" There are adjectives already available for such purposes: good = better bad = worse Neologism can be used to emphasize things to achieve hyperbolic connotations but quoting Shakespeare shouldn't support the idea that it is correct Hey, but what do I know? It's not even my native language :)
Better than the next? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange However, if taken literally, I find the meaning very negative - if the current thing is better than the next, then the next thing must be worse, so things would just keep getting worse and worse How do you explain this phrase idiom?
worse vs. less better - English Language Usage Stack Exchange What is the right way to convey the meaning that I want to say? Your job is worse than mine, so I am not going to quit my job Is there a better choice to say this? Should I use less better than
From worse to better - English Language Usage Stack Exchange 1 It's interesting because from better to worse is a very well known phrase—yet reversing it doesn't sound quite right To me, however, I would reverse it in a different fashion Instead of the original (and opposite) meaning: From better to worse Or the new (but awkward): From worse to better I would use: To better from worse