case
1noun
Idioms for case
Origin of case
1synonym study for case
OTHER WORDS FROM case
case·less, adjective case·less·ly, adverbWORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH case
encase in caseWords nearby case
British Dictionary definitions for in any case (1 of 2)
noun
Word Origin for case
British Dictionary definitions for in any case (2 of 2)
noun
verb (tr)
Word Origin for case
Medical definitions for in any case
n.
Cultural definitions for in any case
A grammatical category indicating whether nouns and pronouns are functioning as the subject of a sentence (nominative case) or the object of a sentence (objective case), or are indicating possession (possessive case). He is in the nominative case, him is in the objective case, and his is in the possessive case. In a language such as English, nouns do not change their form in the nominative or objective case. Only pronouns do. Thus, ball stays the same in both “the ball is thrown,” where it is the subject, and in “Harry threw the ball,” where it is the object.
Idioms and Phrases with in any case (1 of 2)
Also, at all events; in any event. No matter what happens, certainly; also, whatever the fact is, anyway. For example, In any case, I plan to go, or Call me tomorrow, at all events, or He may not be getting a raise, but in any event his boss thinks highly of him. In any case dates from the second half of the 1800s, at all events from about 1700, and in any event from the 1900s. For an antonym, see in no case.