I try not to cringe when people use language in a way that seems wrong to me. My idea of whatâs right, as Iâve learned the hard way, isnât necessarily right. So who am I to judge? But though I can hold my tongue, I canât just turn off my cringe impulse at will, as evidenced by my reaction when I hear people say, âIf worst comes to worst.âTo me, that first T is like nails on a chalkboard. How can worst come to worst, I wonder, if itâs already worst? Clearly, the fear is that something already bad â a worse thing â could go even further downhill, all the way to its worst possible state. So obviously, people who use two âworstsâ in this expression are botching up the logical original wording, âif worse comes to worst.âSo I scoffed and I sniffed and I silently judged every time I heard the version with two âworstsâ until the year 2023 when, after about 20 years of writing about grammar, I finally looked it up.#placement_573654_0_i{width:100%;max-width:550px;margin:0 auto;}var rnd = window.rnd || Math.floor(Math.random()*10e6);var pid573654 = window.pid573654 || rnd;var plc573654 = window.plc573654 || 0;var abkw = window.abkw || '';var absrc = 'https://ads.empowerlocal.co/adserve/;ID=181918;size=0x0;setID=573654;type=js;sw='+screen.width+';sh='+screen.height+';spr='+window.devicePixelRatio+';kw='+abkw+';pid='+pid573654+';place='+(plc573654++)+';rnd='+rnd+';click=CLICK_MACRO_PLACEHOLDER';var _absrc = absrc.split("type=js"); absrc = _absrc[0] + 'type=js;referrer=' + encodeURIComponent(document.location.href) + _absrc[1];document.write('');Good thing I held my tongue. âThe traditional idiom, evidenced by the Oxford English Dictionary consistently from the 16th century, is worst comes to worst,â writes Garnerâs Modern English usage.Merriam Websterâs Dictionary of English Usage reports that the expression âworst comes to worstâ seems to have first appeared in print in 1597, its meaning identical to the way people use it now: âif the worst that can possibly happen does happen.â It wasnât till more than a century later that the expression I assumed was the original, âworse comes to worst,â appeared in print.âPresumably it was the desire to make the phrase more logical that gave rise to the variant âif the worse comes to the worst,â which was first recorded in 1719, when it was used (in the past tense) by David Defoe in âRobinson Crusoe,ââ Merriamâs writes.Interestingly, when I searched a version of âRobinson Crusoeâ online, I found on page 183 âif the worst came to the worstâ â with two Ts â meaning that sometime between the publication of the edition Merriam-Webster referenced and the edition I saw, someone had change Defoeâs âworseâ to âworstâ in order to make it correct according to the standards of his time.This back-and-forth supports Merriamâs central point about the two forms of this expression: âIn the centuries since, this phrase has shown a stubborn unwillingness to settle into fixed form.âFor example, in 1937, a writer in the New Republic wrote: â⌠if worst comes to worst, come to the aid of France.âThen in 1952, the Publication of the Modern Language Association of America wrote, â⌠if worse comes to the worst, the author himself can arrange for it.âThe back and forth continues to this day. Searching Google, I get 64,000 hits for âworse comes to worstâ and 92,000 for âworst comes to worst.âMy Microsoft Word spell-check, as I type this, insists that âworst comes to worstâ is an error. The Associated Press Stylebook, however, prefers the two Ts.A search of Googleâs Ngram Viewer, which is a database of published writing, shows that both forms have been in regular use since at least 1820. âWorst comes to worstâ was two to three times more popular until the 1950s, when âworseâ began to close the gap, eventually becoming the preferred form in the late 1970s â but only slightly.Both âworse comes to worstâ and âworst comes to worstâ are common today. Even a form that uses âworseâ twice is pretty common in print, but experts donât defend that one.So if you use this expression, make sure you use âworstâ as the final word, but it doesnât matter if you use âworstâ or âworseâ in the first position. Iâve learned â the hard way â not to judge.â June Casagrande is the author of âThe Joy of Syntax: A Simple Guide to All the Grammar You Know You Should Know.â She can be reached at JuneTCN@aol.com. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('ad-1515727'); });
Del Norte Triplicate
A Word, Please: Is it worst?
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March 18, 2023 at 07:00 AM
4 min read
4 years ago
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Published March 18, 2023 at 07:00 AM
Reading Time 4 min
Category general