This is not an idiom. It means exactly what the definitions say - something is in a state of disorder that is worse than normal.
This is not an idiom. The idiom is "her BARK is worse than her bite" which is a dog reference meaning that she and the dog make a lot of noise but aren't really dangerous. This sentence seems to mean that she has an injured shoulder which is worse than a bite that she also has.
It means that you made matters worse by saying or doing something that inflamed the situation even worse than it already was.
Yes, stress makes Bipolar Disorder behavior worse. My daughter is Bipolar.
In short, it means to make things worse. Fire needs oxygen, which is in air, so supplying it with more oxygen would only make things worse. A similar expression is feeding the fire.
to make a bad thing worse
It means if you think about if something Ibadan is going to happen then it actually will!
He had a psychopathic disorder and his drinking made it worse.
If you rub something in, you make someone feel even worse when something bad happens by talking about it. For example, if someone doesn't have enough money to buy the latest video game, talking about how fun the game is would be rubbing it in.
Getting worse.
State
Both are pretty bad, but I would say cancer is worse. You can control depression with medication and it also won't kill you. With cancer, you could actually die from it.
The idiom may be "as if anything else could go wrong" or "as if anything else could be worse." The phrase usually follows the report of an occurrence that is adverse, unfortunate, or unfavorable. It precedes the revelation that there is an aspect that is even more detrimental or unfavorable. It is roughly synonymous with the prepositional phrase "from bad to worse." Example: "A fire destroyed the factory and its machines. As if anything could be worse, the plans needed to rebuild the machinery were also destroyed in the fire."