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ill
1[ il ]
adjective
She felt ill, so her teacher sent her to the nurse.
ill manners.
ill feeling.
of ill repute.
Synonyms: iniquitous, wrong
Antonyms: good
ill fortune.
- of inferior worth or ability; unskillful; inexpert:
an ill example of scholarship.
His mom is the illest cook.
noun
- an unfavorable opinion or statement:
I can speak no ill of her.
- harm or injury:
His remarks did much ill.
Synonyms: misery, affliction, pain, hurt
- trouble, distress, or misfortune:
Many ills befell him.
Synonyms: calamity
- evil:
to know the difference between good and ill.
Synonyms: depravity
- sickness or disease.
Synonyms: affliction, illness
adverb
- in an ill manner.
- unsatisfactorily; poorly:
It ill befits a man to betray old friends.
- in a hostile or unfriendly manner.
- unfavorably; unfortunately.
- with displeasure or offense.
- faultily; improperly.
- with difficulty or inconvenience; scarcely:
Buying a new car is an expense we can ill afford.
I'll
2[ ahyl ]
- contraction of I will.
ill.
3abbreviation for
- illustrated.
- illustration.
- illustrator.
- most illustrious.
Ill.
4abbreviation for
- Illinois.
Ill.
1abbreviation for
- Illinois
I'll
2/ aɪl /
contraction of
- I will or I shall
ill
3/ ɪl /
adjective
- usually postpositive not in good health; sick
- characterized by or intending evil, harm, etc; hostile
ill deeds
- causing or resulting in pain, harm, adversity, etc
ill effects
- ascribing or imputing evil to something referred to
ill repute
- promising an unfavourable outcome; unpropitious
an ill omen
- harsh; lacking kindness
ill will
- not up to an acceptable standard; faulty
ill manners
- ill at easeunable to relax; uncomfortable
noun
- evil or harm
to wish a person ill
- a mild disease
- misfortune; trouble
adverb
- badly
the title ill befits him
- with difficulty; hardly
he can ill afford the money
- not rightly
she ill deserves such good fortune
Usage Note
Grammar Note
Word History and Origins
Origin of ill1
Origin of ill2
Word History and Origins
Origin of ill1
Idioms and Phrases
- ill at ease, socially uncomfortable; nervous:
They were ill at ease because they didn't speak the language.
More idioms and phrases containing ill
- get sick
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Laub then took the phone away from her grandmother and told the bank employee that her grandmother was feeling ill and unable to talk any further, even though the employee requested that the grandmother be put back on the line, prosecutors said.
Washington said that at the time he felt he “had to” drink and was bitter about the loss, though he holds no ill will toward the since-disgraced Spacey for taking home the Oscar.
Even as he lay gravely ill in hospital in recent days, Ken Reid was listening to the news on the radio.
An additional 12% were not working because they were taking care of family at home, 10% were ill or disabled, 6% were students, and 4% were retired.
Political messages seem designed to keep voters “emotionally on edge,” said Vaile Wright, a licensed psychologist in Villa Park, Ill., and a member of the APA’s Stress in America team.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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