In a word, No.
The different forms of the word "bad" include comparative form "worse," superlative form "worst," and adverb form "badly."
"Worse yet" can function as a transition phrase in a sentence to signal a shift towards a more negative or distressing point or idea. It is used to introduce additional or heightened negative information following the previous point made.
A sequencing clue word is a word that indicates the order of events or steps in a text. Words like "first," "next," "then," "finally," "before," and "after" are examples of sequencing clue words that help readers understand the chronological order of information.
It is very convenient that the store is located right next to my apartment.
'Better' is the antonym of 'worse'.
One syllable is in the word worse.
"worse"
The word "worse" is already the comparative of the word "bad". If you are looking for a superlative in connection to "worse" the answer is "worst".
Worse is the comparative word.
worce
He had made the lack of trust worse when he lied.
worse
swore, rows
Not as good
"Worse" is the comparative of bad. The superlative is worst.
The comparative word for "bad" is "worse," and the superlative is "worst." Words that generally mean bad, or worse, include inadequate, poor, and substandard.