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I typically use them in the following way. everynametaken Send a noteboard - 09/04/2010 07:28:46 AM
Are those the same? Or is there any difference?



*just wondering*


I typically use ill to mean not feeling well, possibly enough to not go to work, etc. but not necessarily meaning I am "sick" with a cold or the flu and might be contagious. Ill is a more general feeling of not-well-being while sick is actually sick with some kind of germ.
But wine was the great assassin of both tradition and propriety...
-Brandon Sanderson, The Way of Kings
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/language: Being sick and being ill - 08/04/2010 05:14:36 PM 689 Views
Not too much, generally. - 08/04/2010 05:19:37 PM 959 Views
Re: Not too much, generally. - 08/04/2010 05:27:12 PM 569 Views
Thanks both of you *NM* - 08/04/2010 05:30:29 PM 275 Views
I don't know if there's a literal definition... - 08/04/2010 05:46:41 PM 556 Views
I think there is a difference in British English - 08/04/2010 06:19:59 PM 547 Views
I don't know if it is what you are asking - 08/04/2010 07:39:38 PM 618 Views
No, they are not the same - 08/04/2010 08:02:00 PM 509 Views
it depends: are you doing a crossword puzzle? *NM* - 09/04/2010 12:47:05 AM 254 Views
I always say "ill" when it's something indelicate. - 09/04/2010 05:16:17 AM 626 Views
I typically use them in the following way. - 09/04/2010 07:28:46 AM 573 Views
UK says "ill" for unwell and "be sick" for "to vomit". US says "sick" for "unwell". - 09/04/2010 08:44:02 AM 594 Views
I knew it! *NM* - 09/04/2010 09:29:23 AM 273 Views

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