US /ˈʌndɚ ði ˈwɛðɚ/
・UK /ˈʌndə ðə ˈweðə/
It means you're feeling a little bit sick or a little bit under the weather.
or a little bit under the weather.
I've been a little under the weather.
Thanks for seeing me, I've been a little under the weather.
大家好,我是 freeportenglish.com 的 Adam 老师,欢迎您今天来学每日一句学英文。我希望您从今天的课程会有很大的收获。 今天的每日一句学英文的句子是:"Under the weather,身体不适,生病。" This is not something big, maybe just when you have a cold.
这不是生大病,可能是感冒。 Here is an example sentence for under the weather: "You look terrible today, what's wrong?" Oh, I'm just feeling under the weather.
All of us have done it: you're feeling under the weather and turn to good old Doctor Internet to figure out what ails you.
All of us have done it-- you're feeling under the weather
Are you constantly under the weather lately, even when there's no apparent reason for it?
Are you constantly under the weather lately, even when there's no apparent reason for it?
Are you constantly under the weather lately, even when there's no apparent reason for it?
Are you constantly under the weather lately, even when there's no apparent reason for it?
If you think something as trivial as feeling under the weather is going to keep the goat Michael Jordan down, think again.
So you could say, "I'm unwell." "I'm ill." "I'm poorly." "I'm under the weather." "I'm sick." You could also say, "I'm feeling unwell," or "I'm not feeling well." "I'm feeling poorly." "I'm feeling ill." "I'm feeling sick." Now, "I'm feeling sick" is a little bit different to "I'm sick." If you say, "I'm sick," it suggests that you're poorly, you're generally unwell.
poorly, I'm under the weather,
If you are "under the weather", which surely we always are, because the weather is in the sky.
But if you are "under the weather" it means you're a little bit ill.
This is just because I'm under the weather.
This is just because I'm under the weather.