Active Users:531 Time:08/04/2025 02:27:39 PM
/language: Being sick and being ill Maria Send a noteboard - 08/04/2010 05:14:36 PM
Are those the same? Or is there any difference?



*just wondering*
Maria





Little?
Me?
Far from it.
I am just large enough.
Fill myself completely
lengthwise and across
from top to bottom.
Are you larger than yourself maybe?

-Ingrid Hagerup-
Reply to message
/language: Being sick and being ill - 08/04/2010 05:14:36 PM 744 Views
Not too much, generally. - 08/04/2010 05:19:37 PM 1022 Views
Re: Not too much, generally. - 08/04/2010 05:27:12 PM 634 Views
Thanks both of you *NM* - 08/04/2010 05:30:29 PM 308 Views
I don't know if there's a literal definition... - 08/04/2010 05:46:41 PM 618 Views
I think there is a difference in British English - 08/04/2010 06:19:59 PM 610 Views
I don't know if it is what you are asking - 08/04/2010 07:39:38 PM 681 Views
No, they are not the same - 08/04/2010 08:02:00 PM 567 Views
it depends: are you doing a crossword puzzle? *NM* - 09/04/2010 12:47:05 AM 280 Views
I always say "ill" when it's something indelicate. - 09/04/2010 05:16:17 AM 685 Views
I typically use them in the following way. - 09/04/2010 07:28:46 AM 604 Views
UK says "ill" for unwell and "be sick" for "to vomit". US says "sick" for "unwell". - 09/04/2010 08:44:02 AM 656 Views
I knew it! *NM* - 09/04/2010 09:29:23 AM 302 Views

Reply to Message