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I can say i'm ill or i'm sick (i'd prefer fell ill here) you are very unlikely to get a disease from. But what is the difference between the usage of these terms
Is it correct to think that if i say i have been ill for a week it could both mean i am still ill or i just got better He had to spend three nights in mumbai general hospital I thought that if you have recovered you should say i was ill for a week.
I'll is a contraction of i will
These types of apostrophe words are called contractions (though be aware that there are other reasons to use apostrophes besides forming contractions) The apostrophe indicates that one or more letters were removed, thereby shortening, or contracting, the word In this example, i (wi)ll = i'll as kb90 mentions, contractions are generally considered less. Ill intentions often result in ill deeds
If you mean physically unwell, neither of your sentences would be normal By adding person, you are implying the bad sense The best way to describe someone who is unwell, and have it be interpreted as you want, is to add the word feeling The meanings are very similar and both sound fairly natural to me
The implication is clear either way, and i might not think about the difference unless dissecting written text
I'd say there's a subtle distinction in who makes up or makes up for the lost time, however I'd say it is your daughter who is making up the lost time, since she is the one actually doing the action that was missed. I want to apologize for some mistake in official mail and want to make them sure i will not do that again I will take care of this next time
Or i will take care of this onwards. What is difference between ill and sick, how do i say sick people or ill people to refer to people not feeling well? In an out of office email message i am trying to express that i will be on vacation from 03 january 2021 through 28 january 2022 and, given that the last day is a friday, i also want to add a retur. The story says in which is fine
The wind blew the house down
You may feel whatever you like but the story is set in stone If a house is made of straw, one can say blow your house in [from the outside]. We would rarely say get (an) illness this is not idiomatic We could either say get ill (or fall ill) or get a disease, though catch a disease is perhaps more likely
If the type of disease is known then we would use that John got ill while touring india
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