at the worst
Adverb 1. Under the most negative or severe possible circumstances; considering the worst possible outcome. This phrase is used to describe a situation from the perspective of its most pessimistic or least favorable potential result.
The phrase "at the worst" is used to frame a discussion or assessment by stating the most severe negative consequence that could realistically happen. It often precedes or follows a statement to limit the scope of potential damage or to express resilience.
- (This limits the potential negative outcome to a manageable loss.)
- (This assesses the most severe realistic diagnosis.)
- Contrast with "at best": Often used in contrast to show a range of possible outcomes.
- The review was mixed; at best, it will help sales a little, and at the worst, it will be ignored completely.
- Hypothetical and Conditional Scenarios: Commonly used in conditional ("if") clauses or when speculating.
- If they find out, at the worst, we'll have to apologize.
- At worst: A more common modern variant with identical meaning and usage.
- At worst, the meeting will be boring.
- Worst-case scenario (noun phrase): A detailed description of the most unfavorable possible outcome.
- In the worst-case scenario, the project is canceled.
- In the worst case
- If the worst comes to the worst
- Under the worst circumstances
The phrase does not describe an action but rather a perspective or a conditional assessment. It functions adverbially to modify the entire clause that describes the potential negative outcome. It is used for pragmatic reasoning, risk assessment, and to express a stoic or prepared attitude towards potential problems.
- under the worst of conditions
- at worst we'll go to jail