to make matters worse

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Anonymous  #545596  Wed, 23 Jul 08 08:20 PM
Hi,

My house has termites. To make matters worse, the pipes leak.

Can I use 'what's worse' instead of 'to make matters worse' here?
Is there any difference between them?

Thanks.

  
Mr Wordy  #545606  Wed, 23 Jul 08 09:00 PM

Yes, you can.

"What's worse" means that the leaky pipes are a bigger problem than the termites, while "To make matters worse" just means that the leaky pipes compound the problems, rather than necessarily being a bigger problem individually.

Otherwise, the only difference is that the contraction in "What's worse" makes it more conversational/informal, and less appropriate in formal writing. "What is worse" is, to me, OK in all types of writing.

  
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Anonymous  #545615  Wed, 23 Jul 08 09:51 PM
Hi Mr Wordy,

Thank you very much for your help. Can I put 'to make matters worse'  and 'what's worse' at the end of the sentence like

My house has termites.  The pipes leak, to make matters worse/what's worse.

Thanks.
  
Mr Wordy  #545624  Wed, 23 Jul 08 10:54 PM

"to make matters worse" is not exactly wrong at the end of a sentence, but to me it's much more natural at the beginning.

"what's worse" does not work at the end of a sentence.

  
Anonymous  #545827  Thu, 24 Jul 08 11:20 AM
Hi Mr Wordy,

Many thanks!
  
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