Qingfang zhang
“What ails you” what is the meaning of the sentence and in which way you express in your country?
2016年4月5日 08:35
回答 · 10
2
'What ails you?' is a very archaic way of saying 'What's wrong?' or 'What's the matter?'. Forget about it. Nobody has asked this question in this way for several hundred years. You will never hear this.
2016年4月5日
1
It's not a common phrase, but we all understand it as slightly archaic. You hardly ever see it as a question; it's usually found as part of a (poetic) phrase: "...to cure what ails you" "...good for what ails you" I would not even change the phrase. Use it as a set phrase only, with "you" in the general sense.
2016年4月5日
1
as per previous answers, I doubt very much that you'll ever hear this sentence used. In Australia, we might ask this question by saying - 'feeling a bit crook are you?'
2016年4月5日
1
It means 'what is wrong ?' or 'what is the matter ?' [UK English] : do you feel sick, or do you have a problem ? It is 'old' English, dating from Elizabethan times, the time of Shakespeare.
2016年4月5日
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