ill

/ɪl/ (bre, ipa) · [ˈɪl] /ɪl/ (ame, ipa) · [ˈɪl] /ˈil/ (ame, mw) · /ɪl-/ (bre, ipa) · [ˈɪl] /ɪl-/ (ame, ipa)

ill — adjective

  • illpositive
  • worsecomparative
  • worstsuperlative

1. Experiencing a disease or medical condition that keeps your body from working no

1.形容詞A2
釋義

Experiencing a disease or medical condition that keeps your body from working normally.

例句

Tunde was too ill to go to school on Monday, so he stayed in bed.

too ill to [verb]

The old cat became ill after eating something from the rubbish bin.

同義詞
  • sick

    More common in American English; 'sick' can also mean feeling nauseous, while 'ill' usually refers to a broader condition.

  • unwell

    Less severe and more polite; often used in formal or careful language.

  • poorly

    Informal British English, used mainly in spoken language.

反義詞
  • well

    The most common opposite; simply means in good health.

  • healthy

    Describes a long-term state of good health rather than the temporary absence of illness.

文法句型

be ill

be ill with [illness]

fall ill

be taken ill

用法筆記

In modern English, 'ill' is usually placed after a linking verb ('be', 'feel', 'become') rather than directly before a noun. Saying 'an ill man' sounds old-fashioned; 'a sick man' is far more natural. One common exception is the fixed phrase 'ill health'.

常見錯誤

She is an ill woman.
She is ill.
💡In everyday English, 'ill' is not placed before a noun (except in fixed phrases like 'ill health').
He was ill of a fever.
He was ill with a fever.
💡The correct preposition after 'ill' is 'with', not 'of'.

2. Having a negative, damaging, or morally wrong character — used of effects, inten

2.形容詞C1
釋義

Having a negative, damaging, or morally wrong character — used of effects, intentions, fortune, or reputation.

例句

The factory closures had ill effects on the whole town's economy.

ill effects

Despite the heated debate, Faisal bore no ill will toward the new manager.

ill will

同義詞
  • bad

    The everyday equivalent; less formal and far more versatile.

  • harmful

    Focuses on causing damage or injury specifically.

  • unfavorable

    Lighter in tone; describes conditions or outcomes that do not help.

反義詞
  • good

    The general opposite in moral or qualitative contexts.

  • beneficial

    Specifically positive in effect or outcome.

文法句型

ill + noun

用法筆記

This sense is largely confined to a set of fixed noun phrases ('ill will', 'ill effects', 'ill health', 'ill fortune', 'ill repute'). In most other contexts, the everyday word 'bad' is preferred. Distinguish from sense 1: sense 2 always modifies a noun directly (attributive position), whereas sense 1 is used predicatively.

常見錯誤

The food was ill.
The food was bad.
💡'Ill' meaning 'bad' is not used after a linking verb; it only appears before nouns in set phrases.
He has ill luck.
He has bad luck.
💡'Ill fortune' and 'ill luck' exist but are very formal; 'bad luck' is much more natural.

3. Producing a positive result even though the situation seems unfavorable — only u

3.形容詞
釋義

Producing a positive result even though the situation seems unfavorable — only used in the traditional proverb about a wind that brings benefit to someone.

例句

Dewi lost her job but found a better one — an ill wind indeed.

it's an ill wind that blows nobody any good

The market crash hurt many investors, but some buyers picked up bargains. An ill wind indeed.

文法句型

it's an ill wind that blows nobody any good

用法筆記

This sense exists ONLY inside the fixed proverb 'it's an ill wind that blows nobody any good' (and shortened references to it). You cannot use 'ill' by itself to mean 'good' in any other context — that would confuse readers.

常見錯誤

The concert was ill!' (attempting to mean 'good')
Use 'It's an ill wind that blows nobody any good' as a complete proverb.
💡'Ill' never functions as standalone slang for 'good'.

ill — adverb

ill — noun

ill — prefix