- Actually I'm a bit under the weather.
- I'm fine, but the missus has been a little under the weather recently.
- She's going to stay home because she is a bit under the weather.
- You look under the weather today.
- I'm feeling a bit under the weather today.
- Don't disturb her. She's feeling under the weather these days.
- She is probably a bit under the weather 。 You know.
- I'm afraid I felt rather under the weather this morning.
- He was a little bit under the weather.
- I'm afraid ash is feeling a little bit under the weather.
- I feel a bit under the weather today.
- Feeling under the weather may be a result of overindulgence.
- Sorry. Actually, I feel a bit under the weather today.
- For example, under the weather is an idiom meaning ill. So when people say "I'm under the weather", they are saying that they're not feeling well.
- It was an ironic gesture: I'm always under the weather, he wanted to say.
- Are you ok Alex? You look a bit under the weather.
- But it seems like you're a little under the weather now.
- What's wrong with you? You look a little under the weather.
- Can we make it a little later? I feel under the weather.
- No, he's been feeling under the weather.
- Are you still feeling under the weather?
- I am now a little under the weather.
- If you're the type to ignore the signs that you're under the weather, maybe a freaky nightmare will prove the point.
- I'm feeling under the weather, I may have the flu.
- Brian: Yeah. I've been feeling under the weather recently.
- Bill: I'm feeling under the weather. It's nothing.
- I'm afraid he's a bit under the weather.
- I feel really under the weather.
- My father is feeling a little under the weather.
- I am feeling a bit under the weather. I think I've caught a cold.
- Are you feeling better now or are you still under the weather?
- Fine today, through a bit under the weather last week.
- His father was under the weather last week, but he's all right now.
- Adam: My dong, Cooper, has been a bit under the weather lately.
- I've been feeling under the weather all day.
- We were on the ball, the bills would have been paid on time.
- With a job, if you aren't quite on the ball one week, you still get paid.
- But all of us - volunteers, workforce, everybody involved - has to keep their eye on the ball, work hard right to the end.
- Maybe then, I thought, I could find a way to prove I had something on the ball.
- We kept our eyes on the ball to maintain the retainership with our clients.