worsification
English
editEtymology 1
editFrom worse + -ification.
Noun
editworsification (countable and uncountable, plural worsifications)
- (humorous, nonstandard) The process by which something becomes worse.
- Near-synonym: shittification
- Antonym: (nonstandard) goodification
- 1946, James Agate, Ego 8: Continuing the Autobiography, Sydney, N.S.W. […]: George G. Harrap and Company Ltd., page 229:
- I shouldn't mind these well-intentioned worsifications. But I just don't believe they happen.
- 1999 September 4, Icono Clast, “we just got here”, in ba.consumers[1] (Usenet):
- I'm not a xenophobe, Musette. I've seen what's happened to my home and its environs and I don't like it. In spite of all the worsification and uglyfying and franchisation that's happened here, it's still better than elsewhere.
Related terms
editEtymology 2
editBlend of worse + versification.
Noun
editworsification (uncountable)
- (humorous, archaic) The act of composing poetic verse poorly; bad versification.
- 1849 December, [J. R. Lowell], “A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers”, in The Massachusetts Quarterly Review, volume III, number IX (review), page 51:
- Since we have found fault with some of what we may be allowed to call the worsification, we should say that the prose work is done conscientiously and neatly.
References
edit- “worsification, n.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.