Both are correct. "I'll" is a contraction of "I will", so they are just different ways of saying the same thing.
Both "I will do" and "I'll do" are correct. "I will do" is the full form, while "I'll do" is the contracted form. Contracted forms are commonly used in everyday speech and writing for the sake of convenience and brevity.
The term is "ill effects" (the word affect is almost always a verb).
HOSPICE : a medical facility for the palliative treatment of the terminally ill
The correct spelling is "phlegm." It refers to the thick, viscous substance secreted by the mucous membranes of the respiratory passages, typically when a person is ill.
The past tense of "ill" is "was ill" or "became ill."
"ill-clad" has two syllables.
No
That is the correct spelling for "ailing" (sick, ill).
Nixon sought to correct the public ill will over Vietnam through rehabilitation policies.
ill-in-oy Illinois is a French word. The correct pronunciation is Ill-in-nwa.
That is the correct spelling of the word "queasy" (ill or nauseaous).
If you are talking about the ill, Enfermo in the correct word to use.
Yes it is, as ill-fitting (not the correct size or construction). Many paired modifiers are, especially if they mean something different when combined.
"The way you have it written answers as follows: An ill educated man is a an educated man who is ill. An ill-educated man is a man who is poorly educated." The above quote is what was previously written. Answer: ill educated man - an educated man that is ill (previously correct). ill-educated man - well, ill-educated is not a real word and is mistakenly used for uneducated.
I've looked on a bunch of sites and none of them have a correct answer. Ill keep on looking
HOSPICE : a medical facility for the palliative treatment of the terminally ill
Oslo later ill come in with a correct answer if this is wrong :P
The correct answer is Terminally-ill person.