Did you
know?
under the weather (idiom)
slightly unwell or in low spirits.
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ORIGIN
This phrase meaning ill dates to 1827 and, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, is an Americanism. The phrase probably derives from the idea that the weather can affect your mood and health.
Other sources claim that it is a clipped form of the nautical phrase under the weather bow, a reference to the side of the ship's bow that is taking the force of rough seas, and is a reference to seasickness.
Or that it refers to a British/Australian nautical use of the phrase to mean drunk.
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SYNONYMS
ailing, barfy, below par, bummy, down, down with, feeling awful, feeling rotten, feeling terrible, green, indisposed, ill, infirm, laid low, laid up, off-color, poorly, pukey, queasy, ratty, rotten, run down, running temperature, seedy, sick, unhealthy, unwell, woozy
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IMPRESS YOUR FRIENDS TODAY
recite this little poem:
Whether the weather be fine
Or whether the weather be not
Whether the weather be cold
Or whether the weather be hot
We'll weather the weather
Whatever the weather
Whether we like it or not!