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A Writer's Dictionary:

take something ill Definition


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ill
adj worse, worst, iller (colloq), illest (colloq)
    1. Not in good health; sick or unwell.
      Thesaurus: sick, ailing, unhealthy, unwell, under the weather.
    2. Said of health: not good.
    3. Bad or harmful.
      Example: ill effects
      Example: ill-treatment
      Thesaurus: harmful, noxious, bad, evil.
    4. Hostile; unfriendly.
      Example: ill will
      Example: ill feeling
    5. Causing or heralding bad luck.
      Example: an ill omen
    6. Said of manners: incorrect; improper.
adverb worse, worst
    rather formal or archaic in senses 3‐5:
    1. Badly; wrongly.
      Example: ill-matched
      Example: ill-fitting
    2. Harshly.
      Example: speak ill of someone
    3. Hardly; scarcely.
      Example: be ill able to afford the money
    4. Unfavourably.
      Example: It went ill with them
      Example: think ill of him
    5. Not easily; with difficulty.
      Example: can ill spare the time
noun
    1. Evil; harm; trouble.
      Example: one of the ills of modern society
    2. An injury, ailment or misfortune.
Idiom: go ill with someone
    chiefly old use
    To end in danger or misfortune for them.
Idiom: ill at ease
    Uneasy; uncomfortable; embarrassed.
      Thesaurus: uneasy, uncomfortable, anxious, discomfited.
Idiom: ill become someone
    rather formal or old use
    To do them no credit; not to be to their advantage.
Idiom: speak ill of someone or something
Idiom: take something ill
    chiefly old use
    To be offended by it.
      Thesaurus: take offence at, resent, be offended by, take umbrage at, be annoyed by.
Idiom: with an ill grace
    Ungraciously.
Etymology: 15c in sense 1; 12c in the sense ‘wicked' or ‘immoral': from Norse illr.



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