Yes, it is. It means mildly ill or not at one's best; gloomy.
"Ill" means bad or poor -- taking something ill means taking it poorly or badly.
This particular idiom being in evidence since about the 1500s according to the Cambridge dictionary of American idioms. The saying "as sick as a dog" has its origins in the fact that dogs will willingly eat almost anything and be very ill afterwards. (indeed often eating the very evidence of their being ill soon after they produce it.)
If you are "under the weather," then you are feeling ill. The image is of a dark cloud hanging over you, making you miserable.The idiom "feeling a bit under the weather" means that a person is feeling slightly ill.
The Best of Ill Niño was created on 2006-09-12.
Traditional psychiatric treatment is the best for the mentally ill.
It refers to being extremely sick. The idiom compares a human's very uncomfortable illness (like the flu or a bad virus) with how ill a dog gets when it eats something it is not supposed to eat and often gets a very severe reaction.
The more common idiom is "bad news travels fast".After a big accident, ill news travels fast.Unsure how my friend knew I went to the hospital, he said, "ill news travels fast."
You can help your spouse whose mother is ill and refusing help and therapy because helps the spouse what to expect and helps to know what to do at the moment.
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Well, she is ill and in need of help, whether holistic or medical. She needs to be diagnosed properly and then take action to help her depression. This will not get better. Im sorry your getting ill but you have to do it for the two of you.
Dorothy Dix worked to help the mentally ill.