"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.
Ill, more ill, most ill.
She is as ill as that man. He is the illest man among all.
Ill is already an adjective.
That your very sick or seriously ill.
very ill. so ill that it might seem like your going to the grave with you illness
Uneducated, untaught, untrained, ill-educated, ill-informed
9 hrs
it used to refer to an ill educated person
a person who is receiving medical care is "patient" the "sick" is people who are ill
mentally ill is having trouble with mentality or things that require the brain and bad is unexceptable behavior does that answer your question
hey man i dont know the question ill ask my friend
Using slang language can affect a person by potentially creating a sense of belonging or camaraderie with those who understand the slang, but it may also distance them from others who do not. Slang can influence how a person is perceived by others, impacting their professional image or social interactions. Overuse of slang could lead to difficulties in effective communication or being taken seriously in certain contexts.
OF COURSE what sort of un human ill educated question is that?! Yes.
Attack rate is the proportion of exposed that become ill. Incidence rate is the number of new cases that become ill over a certain period of time.
The pupose of the "guilty but mentally ill" verdict is to
Outstanding assets are assets that are owed to an individual or business. Outstanding liabilities are debts that ill be incurred in the future.
In American usage the two are synonymous except that ill often suggests suffering from a disease or ailment, while sick often suggests feeling disgust and/or nausea, as in "That makes me sick."