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Ill - Comparative and superlative | WordReference Forums
Feb 26, 2010 · I suppose one might say I'm iller now than I was yesterday but, on reflection, we're much more likely to say "I'm worse than I was yesterday", just as in the opposite case you would say "I'm better than I was yesterday". I think logically it should be iller and illest but we tend to talk about people getting better or worse when they are ill.
on the evening of or in the evening of | WordReference Forums
Oct 28, 2014 · Here is the context, people: "On behalf of the French President, an official supper was held in honor of the Armenian and Azeri Presidents at the Elysee Palace on the evening of October 27."