15

What is the correct usage? Apparently it is "I feel badly", but but wouldn't that mean you have an inadequate ability to feel?

tchrist
  • 134,759

6 Answers6

23

Assuming you're talking about a situation where something bad has happened to your friend, and you're saying you feel unhappy on their behalf, then "I feel bad for you" is correct.

You are right that "I feel badly" would mean you are having difficulty in feeling at all - which would be a rather unusual thing to say :)

In general the verb "to feel" will take an adjective (happy, sad, good, bad, angry, relieved) after it to indicate the feeling, rather than an adverb.

psmears
  • 16,391
  • So, in most cases, "I feel bad" would be correct? Is there a use for "I feel badly" except for when saying you are unable to feel at all? – awesomeguy Apr 10 '11 at 21:44
  • 1
    @awesomeguy: The word "badly" can be used as an intensifier, so "I feel badly in need of a drink" means that you really really need one. (This is where @Emre's suggestion that it could just about mean "I am attracted to you" comes from: it would mean not just "I feel for you", but "I feel for you, a lot" - but it ends up sounding a little strange and awkward, hence the "teen-speak" comment :). But saying "I feel badly" on its own (without specifying what you feel) sounds very strange. – psmears Apr 10 '11 at 22:05
  • Semantically, there is no issue here. The idea is that you have a bad feeling. Neither the adverb, nor the adjective are perfectly accurate. "I feel bad" puts the bad property onto you (contrast with "I feel inadequate") and "I feel badly" puts it onto feel, rather than the feeling. (Can you even separate the feeling state from the feeling action?) In some languages, it is grammatical to use an adverb. The point is that semantics cannot provide a satisfactory explanation why the chosen syntax is adverb versus adjective. It's just the way it is. – Kaz Apr 26 '12 at 03:15
  • Re: "But saying "I feel badly" on its own (without specifying what you feel) sounds very strange" -- Can't saying just "I feel badly" mean the same as "I feel poorly" / "I feel in a bad state"? – HeWhoMustBeNamed Feb 20 '20 at 04:19
  • @MrReality: No, that's not idiomatic - you'd say "I feel bad". ("Poorly" in that context is an adjective, not the adverb form of "poor"). – psmears Feb 20 '20 at 10:24
  • Could -- Charlotte's Web, page 60: "You needn't feel too badly, Wilbur, " she said. -- have used bad instead of badly since, clearly, Wilbur is dejected at his attempts to spin a web? – Kedar Mhaswade Aug 26 '20 at 10:35
6

Certain verbs like feel, smell, and taste take adjectives as complements, not adverbs. If you use an adverb with them, it changes the sense altogether, because it now modifies the verb rather than serving as a predicate complement describing the subject.

  • Sour milk tastes bad. Honey tastes good.
  • I feel bad that I didn’t go. I feel good about that.
  • Those flowers smell good. That sewer smells bad.

Contast with:

  • He tastes poorly because he’s burnt his tongue.
  • My fingers feel badly when I have gloves on.
  • A man with no nose smells poorly if at all.

So you can have a dog that smells bad but like all dogs, he nonetheless smells well.

tchrist
  • 134,759
  • Wow. This answer has been absorbed so I can regurgitate it at parties. Really good arguments. – Gray Apr 26 '19 at 17:11
3

"I feel badly for you" sounds like teen-speak for "I am attracted to you". You probably meant "I feel bad for you".

Emre
  • 558
1

I think you can substitute the word sad for the word bad and it is then easier to get a better understanding of the use for bad. Clear?

Deedee
  • 11
1

You cannot use badly as a verb. It will always be an adverb. In those two sentences, feel is your verb, which links an adjective (in this case bad) to the subject. Badly would be used to describe how something was done.

I feel bad for her.

She was hurt badly.

-4

Badly is an adverb and explains how something was done.

She was hurt badly.

Bad is an adjective and describes a noun.

She is a bad driver.

Since the word being modified is "feel" (a verb), the proper modifier is "badly" (an adverb).

This is essentially the same as the difference between using "good" and "well".

  • I feel well.
  • I am in good health.

Well modifies the verb feel while good modifies the noun health.

RegDwigнt
  • 97,231