25

The greeting How are you? is asking How are you doing in general?

How are you?
I'm well. [Misunderstood the question.]

because well as an adjective which means:

in good health especially after having suffered illness or injury

This would be an answer to How are you doing physically, how is your health?

How are you?
I'm good. [Misunderstood the question.]

because good as an adjective means:

having moral excellence or admirableness

This would be an answer to

How would you describe your character, superman? I'm good.

How are you?
I'm doing good. [Grammatically incorrect.]

because good is an adjective, not an adverb.

How are you?
I'm doing well. [Correct.]

because well is an adverb describing how you are doing.

How are you?
I'm doing fine. [Correct.]

because fine is an adjective which means:

being satisfactory or in satisfactory condition


Why do so many people say one of the first three responses?

Hugo
  • 67,535
  • It's funny that the first example is the answer they taught me when I started to study English as second language. – apaderno Aug 13 '10 at 01:39
  • I actually wouldn't object to the first example. @kiamlaluno – mmyers Aug 13 '10 at 02:21
  • You might want to fix your own typo - "not and adverb" with regards to the I'm doing good. quote – a_m0d Aug 13 '10 at 02:55
  • 5
    Shouldn't it be then reasonable to expect you to ask how are you DOING? / I'm doing good, instead of how are you? – bangoker Aug 13 '10 at 05:48
  • The issue is that "How are you?" in context of a greeting means "How are you doing in general?" and not (1) How are you doing physically? / I'm well. or (2) How would you rate yourself as a person, superman? / I'm good. – Edward Tanguay Aug 13 '10 at 08:39
  • In whose greeting context? – Svish Aug 13 '10 at 12:26
  • @Svish in the general context of not having seen a person for a period of time and wanting to greet him and ask how he is doing – Edward Tanguay Aug 13 '10 at 12:31
  • 8
    Hmm. For what it's worth, I think if you don't want to go all the way and say "How are you doing?" it's only fair not to expect everyone else to go all the way and say "I'm doing well." Yes, it's understood that you mean "doing in general" in the question. I think, personally, "doing in general" is also implied in the response. – kitukwfyer Aug 13 '10 at 15:01
  • 12
    This is how people talk; they are not "getting it wrong." Others telling them they are getting their native language wrong are themselves in error, IMO. – moioci Aug 22 '10 at 22:06
  • 12
    I think this question is actively pernicious. By implying that there's something wrong with the way real people actually use the "how are you" standard greeting-and-response in the title, you run a serious risk of hopelessly confusing students of the language who don't know any better. There is nothing wrong with "I'm well" as a response to "How are you". Whether it is stylized or idiomatic, that's another question. – thesunneversets Nov 19 '10 at 23:34
  • This is small talk. "How are you" does indeed refer directly to health and as such, another common greeting is "are you well" (at least in England) which means exactly the same thing. To both, 'I'm well' is the proper response. Furthermore, 'I'm good', while being grammatically incorrect, is very common. – Karl Aug 01 '12 at 06:23
  • When I say that I am fine, my children quickly correct me and point out that I am old and ugly. – mongo May 17 '18 at 14:44

7 Answers7

64

The reason people give the responses you label as “wrong” is because well and good have more meanings than the ones you cite.

Merriam-Webster, for example, gives definitions that make sense of the three examples you label “wrong”:

  • For “I’m well”, there is well (adjective) 1b: being in satisfactory condition or circumstances

  • For “I’m good”, there is good (adjective) 2e: free from infirmity or sorrow

  • For “I’m doing good”, there is good (adverb) 1: WELL

So they all seem fine to me.

tchrist
  • 134,759
nohat
  • 68,560
  • "being in satisfactory condition or circumstances" is synonymous with "prosperous" and "well-off" which is an even odder response to "How are you? / Prosperous, thank you."
  • – Edward Tanguay Aug 13 '10 at 01:01
  • "How are you doing? / Free from infirmity, thank you." Even odder.
  • – Edward Tanguay Aug 13 '10 at 01:03
  • "Good" can be used as an adjective only for "sense verbs" such as "It smells good." But since "do" is not a sense verb, it is incorrect to say, "I'm doing good."
  • – Edward Tanguay Aug 13 '10 at 01:11