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Ail   /eɪl/   Listen
Ail

verb
(past & past part. ailed; pres. part. ailing)
1.
Be ill or unwell.
2.
Cause bodily suffering to and make sick or indisposed.  Synonyms: pain, trouble.
noun
1.
Aromatic bulb used as seasoning.  Synonym: garlic.



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"Ail" Quotes from Famous Books



... can find, If there be that doth justice Aiming at honesty. [That I may forgive her.] Though they say, "As God liveth," Falsely they swear. Lord, are thine eyes upon lies(65) And not on the truth? Thou hast smitten, they ail not, Consumed them, they take not correction; Their faces set harder than rock, ...
— Jeremiah • George Adam Smith

... the inner room. "She is," she answered; "nothing seems to ail her but weariness and exhaustion. She ...
— Bart Ridgeley - A Story of Northern Ohio • A. G. Riddle

... vapour-bath on the Antarctic Barrier. It was, like everything else I had seen, very ingeniously contrived. The bath was a high box without bottom, and with a hole, large enough for the head, in the top. Ail the walls were double and were made of windproof material, with about an inch between for the air to circulate. This box stood on a platform, which was raised a couple of feet above the snow surface. The box fitted into a groove, and was thus absolutely ...
— The South Pole, Volumes 1 and 2 • Roald Amundsen

... severance * I know nothing of that thou avouchest * nor do I love aught but that which thou lovest * By Him who knoweth the secret of hidden things none discover *I have no desire save union with my lover * and my one business is my passion to conceal * albeit with sore sickness I ail. * This is the exposition of my case and now all hail!" When the jeweller read this letter and learnt its contents he wept with sore weeping, and the slave-girl said to him, "Leave not this place till I return to thee; for he suspecteth me of such and such things, in which he is ...
— The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Volume 3 • Richard F. Burton

... socket, mad with anguish, cast The implement all bloody far away. Then, bellowing, he sounded forth the name Of ev'ry Cyclops dwelling in the caves Around him, on the wind-swept mountain-tops; 470 They, at his cry flocking from ev'ry part, Circled his den, and of his ail enquired. What grievous hurt hath caused thee, Polypheme! Thus yelling to alarm the peaceful ear Of night, and break our slumbers? Fear'st thou lest Some mortal man drive off thy flocks? or fear'st Thyself to die ...
— The Odyssey of Homer • Homer


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