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.
In such contexts as
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.
"I feel good" and "I feel well" are both standard in English, but some insist that only "I feel well" is correct. Part of the opposition to "I feel good" likely stems from a false belief that good only applies to morality and not to physical well-being, though no one disputes the meaning of a phrase like "in good shape." Another objection to "I feel good" is that good is considered more properly an adjective, and that a verb like feel should be followed by an adverb, like well. While good does function as an adverb in phrases like "things are going good," the use is markedly informal; "things are going well" is the phrase typically used in carefully edited text. But the verb in "I feel good" is of a distinct variety: here, feel is a linking verb, which means that it is commonly modified by an adjective
rather than an adverb. Both well and good are adjectives when they follow feel to express a meaning of good health, and both are grammatically correct. In "I feel good" there is often a connotation of good spirits in addition to good health, but the two phrases are otherwise synonymous.




Share