Adverbial good has been under attack from the schoolroom since the 19th century. Insistence on well rather than good has resulted in a split in connotation: well is standard, neutral, and colorless, while good is emotionally charged and emphatic. This makes good the adverb of choice in sports.
"I'm seeing the ball real good" is what you hear —Roger Angell
In such contexts as
listen up. And listen good—Alex Karras
lets fly with his tomatoes before they can flee. He gets Clarence good—Charles Dickinson
good cannot be adequately replaced by well. Adverbial good is primarily a spoken form; in writing it occurs in reported and fictional speech and in generally familiar or informal contexts.
of liquor: used for making mixed drinks when no branded alcohol is specified
also: made with well liquor
a well drink
Good vs. Well: Usage Guide
An old notion that it is wrong to say "I feel good" in reference to health still occasionally appears in print. The origins of this notion are obscure, but they seem to combine someone's idea that good should be reserved to describe virtue and uncertainty about whether an adverb or an adjective should follow feel. Today nearly everyone agrees that both good and well can be predicate adjectives after feel. Both are used to express good health, but good may connote good spirits in addition to good health.
healthy implies full strength and vigor as well as freedom from signs of disease.
a healthy family
sound emphasizes the absence of disease, weakness, or malfunction.
a sound heart
wholesome implies appearance and behavior indicating soundness and balance.
a face with a wholesome glow
robust implies the opposite of all that is delicate or sickly.
a lively, robust little boy
hale applies particularly to robustness in old age.
still hale at the age of eighty
well implies merely freedom from disease or illness.
she has never been a well person
Examples of well in a Sentence
Noun
his quirkily dysfunctional family proved to be a bottomless well of inspiration for the novelist
the spot where the spring bubbles up to the surface and forms a deep wellAdverb
“How did everything go?” “It went well, thank you.”
She works well under pressure.
I did surprisingly well on my history test.
The company is doing well.
He has his own business and is doing well for himself.
You got a perfect score! Well done!
She sings and plays the guitar quite well.
The essay is well written.
He doesn't smoke or drink, and he eats well.
She doesn't treat her boyfriend very well. Adjective
The children are well again.
I don't feel very well.
You don't look so well.
I hope you get well soon.
I hope all is well with you and your family.
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
Trending Part dystopian nightmare and part PETA-friendly plea for tolerance — as a well as a coming-of-age movie with a fairy-tale-like sheen — The Animal Kingdom may have the metaphorical subtlety of an early Stan Lee/Jack Kirby X-Men comic storyline.—David Fear, Rolling Stone, 15 Mar. 2024 Speaking of going back to a well, the new album is a deep distillation of the musical ideas the trio had already been going for with their last two records.—Chris Willman, Variety, 14 Mar. 2024 Thousands of California wells are at risk of drying up despite landmark water law
Faria turned toward downtown, mentioning that business owners are trying to hang on but that the old granary by the railroad tracks closed not long ago.—Jeffrey Fleishman, Los Angeles Times, 12 Mar. 2024 But so far, Universal and Nolan have served each other well.—Pamela McClintock, The Hollywood Reporter, 10 Mar. 2024 Even modest falls in water tables in the continent’s many shallow aquifers could dry up wells that sustain many of the 255 million people living in poverty above them, warns the World Bank.—Fred Pearce, WIRED, 9 Mar. 2024 Moctar has used some of the money he’s earned as a musician to build wells in his home village, where access to fresh water is precarious.—Andy Cush, Pitchfork, 4 Mar. 2024 More than half of Nevada’s monitoring wells show significant decreases in water levels since 1980.—Christopher Flavelle, New York Times, 29 Feb. 2024 Some 1,783 private drinking water wells in northern Kent County were tested for PFAS by September 2018.—Keith Matheny, Detroit Free Press, 4 Mar. 2024
Verb
Sister Wives’ Janelle Brown welled up with emotion after learning people had made donations to animal shelters to honor her late son Garrison Brown.—Jp Mangalindan, Peoplemag, 13 Mar. 2024 DeBose then paused to collect herself as tears welled in her eyes.—Joey Nolfi, EW.com, 31 Jan. 2024 Speaking about the electoral process at one point, her eyes welled with tears.—Ariane Lange, Sacramento Bee, 5 Mar. 2024 Tears welled up in my goggles, pooling at the soft rim of the face cushion.—Lauren Goode, WIRED, 22 Feb. 2024 Most oceanic islands are volcanic, formed by magma that wells up as tectonic plates drift over hot spots in the Earth’s mantle.—Frank Hulley-Jones, Washington Post, 17 Nov. 2023 Thinking about my mother, at home without me, sent me into paroxysms of tears – big, rolling sobs that welled up from someplace deep and uncharted.—Various Staff Writers, Special Correspondents, and Special Contributors, The Christian Science Monitor, 22 Dec. 2023 Shock, bewilderment, a slight nausea, a sudden urge to fight back the tears that welled in my eyes.—Ruby Namdar, The Atlantic, 8 Oct. 2023 She was visibly shaken, with tears welling in her eyes.—Cheyenne Haslett, ABC News, 5 Dec. 2023
Adverb
An eerie stillness characterizes all of Scott’s performances as well.—Zing Tsjeng, Vogue, 20 Mar. 2024 The data company noted that federal and state efforts, including catalytic converter crime ring busts and tighter legal restrictions, could be working as well.—USA TODAY, 20 Mar. 2024 The first season of Goosebumps performed fairly well for Disney+, recording 1.9 billion minutes of viewing time in the United States for the four weeks after its October 2023 premiere, according to Nielsen figures.—Rick Porter, The Hollywood Reporter, 20 Mar. 2024 Bedrooms are ample and well appointed, while bathrooms are spacious and sumptuous with bespoke detailing.—Mark David, Robb Report, 20 Mar. 2024 But by then the AfD may well prove to be Germany’s second-biggest party, and the party system may be so fragmented that unstable and ineffective three-party coalitions, such as the one Scholz is leading today, may be the country’s only option.—Joseph De Weck, The Atlantic, 20 Mar. 2024 After all, presidents don’t know which candidates across the country are well regarded and which are not.—Jon Wilner, The Mercury News, 20 Mar. 2024 But before Zone, the 45-year-old German actor was best known for playing famed anti-Nazi resistance fighter Georg Elser in 13 Minutes, Oliver Hirschbiegel’s 2015 drama about Elsner’s attempt to assassinate Adolf Hitler in 1939, before World War II and before the Holocaust.—Scott Roxborough, The Hollywood Reporter, 8 Mar. 2024 But that’s something Congress has been well aware of for some time.—Bryan Mena, CNN, 8 Mar. 2024
Interjection
Feel wind, feel maybe some splashes of water, but all is calm, until, well, the storm.—Todd Martens, Los Angeles Times, 20 Mar. 2024 Coming back to the drama a little bit—I’m curious about, well, the petty crime, Colin.—Hazlitt, 20 Mar. 2024 There’s a bunch of different— well, a whole mess of different ways to do this.—Stephen Cass, IEEE Spectrum, 20 Mar. 2024 Macro means large, so macronutrients are the nutrients your body needs in, well, large amounts.—Brierley Horton, Ms, Better Homes & Gardens, 20 Mar. 2024 There is definitely competition; well, not so much competition, as a lot of options.—Kristine M. Kierzek, Journal Sentinel, 8 Mar. 2024 The pants, however, are also see-through, which is something even MLB’s biggest stars are having a hard time getting, well, behind.—Anna Lazarus Caplan, Peoplemag, 23 Feb. 2024 But her one-woman show, Kate, which came to Los Angeles last month (well, technically Pasadena) after previous runs in New York and London, is deeply concerned with questions of artistic lies and emotional truth.—Miles Klee, Rolling Stone, 15 Feb. 2024 To abandon that target now would be to admit that the Fed will allow itself to be swayed by, well, nothing — unemployment remains low, and there hasn’t been a recession.—The Editors, National Review, 14 Feb. 2024
Adjective
Confidence: Medium-High A look ahead Most showers are well to our north and south on Saturday, but clouds should still be plentiful.—David Streit, Washington Post, 30 Nov. 2023 Thanks for all the well wishes and prayers and hope to see you soon.—Ingrid Vasquez, Peoplemag, 13 Oct. 2023 This was not the first time Burgess mentioned how well life with their blended family is going.—Daniel S. Levine, Peoplemag, 18 July 2023 In addition to the state-of-the-art tailgating zone, Cindy and her family received some well wishes from former Jets running back Curtis Martin.—Ally Mauch, PEOPLE.com, 25 Aug. 2020 Grateful for all the well wishes....—Philip Ellis, Men's Health, 10 Apr. 2023 Thanks to Chris & everyone for the well wishes.—Melissa Quinn, CBS News, 9 Apr. 2023 Rumors of behind-the-scenes friction have been circulating since February—in particular regarding the show's star Kevin Costner and Sheridan—and to some, the failure to appear seemed like yet another indicator that all is not well with the ranching drama.—Lauren Hubbard, Town & Country, 7 Apr. 2023 Seth Meyers stopped by Studio 8H to offer well wishes.—Rebecca Rubin, Variety, 1 Apr. 2023
These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'well.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English welle, wille "spring of water, pool formed by a spring, pit sunk into the earth to reach water," going back to Old English wælle (Anglian), wiell, wielle (West Saxon, later wille, wylle), going back to a Germanic base *waln(j)- (also *walj-?) with varying stem formations (whence also Old Frisian walla "spring, source," Middle Dutch wal, walle "a seething, boiling heat, spring or river of seething water") and with e-grade ablaut Old High German wella "wave, tide," Old Icelandic vella "boiling, bubbling mass," all nominal derivatives from the base of Germanic *walla- "to well up, seethe, bubble" — more at well entry 2
Note:
Comparable nominal formations from Indo-European *u̯el(H)- "seethe, bubble" with zero-grade ablaut are Old Church Slavic vlĭna "wave," Russian volná (< *u̯l̥H-neh2), Lithuanian vilnìs "wave" (< *u̯l̥H-ni-), Sanskrit ūrmí- "wave" (< *u̯l̥H-mi-).
Verb
Middle English wellen "to rise to the surface, bubble up, boil, seethe," probably in part verbal derivative of welle "spring of water, well entry 1," in part adaptation of the transitive verb wellen "to boil, curdle, melt (metal), refine," going back to Old English wellan, wyllan (< *wiellan) "to cause to boil," probably going back to Germanic *wall(j)an- (whence also Middle Dutch & Middle High German wellen "to make boil," Old Icelandic vella), causative from *wallan- "to well up, seethe, bubble," Class VII strong verb (whence Old English weallan "to boil, bubble up," Old Frisian walla, Old Saxon wallan "to blaze, boil up, well up," Old High German, "to boil up, well up"), a Germanic verbal base of uncertain origin, seen also with a zero-grade present without gemination in Gothic wulan "to seethe, spread (of an ulcer)"
Note:
Both the Middle English Dictionary and the Oxford English Dictionary, third edition (OED), treat the two Middle English verbs wellen as simply the same verb; compare, however, J. de Vries (Nederlands Etymologisch Woordenboek), who treats Dutch wellen "to bubble up" (opborrelen) and wellen "to make boil, hammer white-hot metal together" (doen koken, gloeiende metalen aaneenhameren) in separate articles. The OED asserts that there is a range of dialect attestation of the verb (wællan, wellan, willan, wyllan), apparently on the basis of the few forms given in the citations (the imperatives wel, wyl and wæl in recipes): "In Old English the verb shows the expected reflex of the i-mutation of early Old English æ (West Germanic a) before ll, depending on dialect." But if this statement is based on a reconstruction of the immediate pre-Old English form and inflection of the verb, or its West Germanic predecessor, no such reconstruction is given. The etymology itself merely lists a group of supposed Germanic cognates, summarized by the statement "a causative formation < the same Germanic base as wall v.1 [i.e., Old English weallan]." — In addition to *wallan-, Germanic has an apparent e-grade strong verb *wellan-, seen in Old Saxon and Old High German biwellan "to stain, besmirch," Old Icelandic vella "to well over, boil," and probably Old English wollentēar "with streaming tears." Along with a series of nominal formations outside Germanic based on a zero-grade *u̯l̥H- (see note at well entry 1), the Germanic verbs would lead to an Indo-European base *u̯el(H)- "seethe, bubble." Some have seen this etymon as identical with a homonymous base meaning "to roll" (see welter entry 1), the view of H. Rix, et al. (Lexikon der indogermanischen Verben, 2. Auflage, Wiesbaden, 2001). E. Seebold, on the other hand (Vergleichendes und etymologisches Wörterbuch der germanischen starken Verben, Mouton, 1970, p. 552) thinks the connection in sense is not so easily explained ("Wie diese Bedeutungsvielfalt zu erklären ist, bleibt unklar"; likewise Kluge-Seebold, 22. Auflage, s.v. wallen). Seebold points to the proximity of form and identical meaning of Lithuanian vérda, vìrti "to boil, seethe," Old Church Slavic vĭrěti.
Adverb
Middle English wel, going back to Old English, going back to Germanic *welō (whence Old Frisian wol, wel, wal "in a good manner," Old Saxon wola, wela, wala, Old High German wola, Old Norse vel, val), from an adjectival derivative of the base of *weljan- "to want" — more at will entry 1
First Known Use
Noun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a
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