ChatterBank0 min ago
A turn for the...
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I notice that a turn for the worse and turn for the worst are used in equal numbers. Are both correct?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.'To' and 'for the worse' - with an 'e' - have been used since the 15th century. With 'a turn', it just means a change to a condition which is less favourable. 'Worst' - with a 't' - would change it to least favourable, which does not really hang together with the idea of turning...ie just changing from one state to another.
Hello, Graeme. Personally, I would never use 'worst' in this situation, because it does not truly represent a ''turn'. The steady downhill progress of a terminal illness does not really involve 'turns'. However, were someone already on such a course, to experience a dramatic shift back towards wellness he might rationally be said to have experienced 'a turn for the better'.