adverb, adjective, comparative bet⋅ter, superlative best, interjection, noun | 1. | in a good or satisfactory manner: Business is going well. |
| 2. | thoroughly, carefully, or soundly: to shake well before using; listen well. |
| 3. | in a moral or proper manner: to behave well. |
| 4. | commendably, meritoriously, or excellently: a difficult task well done. |
| 5. | with propriety, justice, or reason: I could not well refuse. |
| 6. | adequately or sufficiently: Think well before you act. |
| 7. | to a considerable extent or degree: a sum well over the amount agreed upon. |
| 8. | with great or intimate knowledge: to know a person well. |
| 9. | certainly; without doubt: I anger easily, as you well know. |
| 10. | with good nature; without rancor: He took the joke well. |
| 11. | in good health; sound in body and mind: Are you well? He is not a well man. |
| 12. | satisfactory, pleasing, or good: All is well with us. |
| 13. | proper, fitting, or gratifying: It is well that you didn't go. |
| 14. | in a satisfactory position; well-off: I am very well as I am. |
| 15. | (used to express surprise, reproof, etc.): Well! There's no need to shout. |
| 16. | (used to introduce a sentence, resume a conversation, etc.): Well, who would have thought he could do it? |
| 17. | well-being; good fortune; success: to wish well to someone. |
| 18. | as well,
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| 19. | as well as, as much or as truly as; equally as: Joan is witty as well as intelligent. |
| 20. | leave well enough alone, avoid changing something that is satisfactory. |

| 1. | a hole drilled or bored into the earth to obtain water, petroleum, natural gas, brine, or sulfur. |
| 2. | a spring or natural source of water. |
| 3. | an apparent reservoir or a source of human feelings, emotions, energy, etc.: He was a well of gentleness and courtesy. |
| 4. | a container, receptacle, or reservoir for a liquid: the well of ink in a fountain pen. |
| 5. | any sunken or deep, enclosed space, as a shaft for air or light, stairs, or an elevator, extending vertically through the floors of a building. |
| 6. | Nautical.
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| 7. | a hollow compartment, recessed area, or depression for holding a specific item or items, as fish in the bottom of a boat or the retracted wheels of an airplane in flight. |
| 8. | any shaft dug or bored into the earth, as for storage space or a mine. |
| 9. | to rise, spring, or gush, as water, from the earth or some other source (often fol. by up, out, or forth): Tears welled up in my eyes. |
| 10. | to send welling up or forth: a fountain welling its pure water. |
| 11. | like, of, resembling, from, or used in connection with a well. |

well 2 (wěl) adv. bet·ter (bět'ər), best (běst)
[Middle English wel, from Old English; see wel-1 in Indo-European roots.] Usage Note: English speakers have used well both as an adjective and as an adverb since Old English times. When applied to people, the adjective well usually refers to a state of health. Like similar adjectives, such as ill and faint, well in this use is normally restricted to the predicate, as in He hasn't been well lately. Well does see occasional use before a noun, as in Benjamin Franklin's "Poor Dick eats like a well man, and drinks like a sick." It also appears in compound adjectives like well-baby, which is well known to pediatricians and recent parents. Good, on the other hand, has a much wider range of senses, including "attractive," as in He looks good, and "competent," as in She's pretty good for a beginner, as well as "healthy." See Usage Note at good. |
Well
(Heb. beer), to be distinguished from a fountain (Heb. 'ain). A "beer" was a deep shaft, bored far under the rocky surface by the art of man, which contained water which percolated through the strata in its sides. Such wells were those of Jacob and Beersheba, etc. (see Gen. 21:19, 25, 30, 31; 24:11; 26:15, 18-25, 32, etc.). In the Pentateuch this word beer, so rendered, occurs twenty-five times.
well
In addition to the idioms beginning with well, also see alive and kicking (well); all's well that ends well; all very well; as well; as well as; augur well for; damn well; do well; full well; get well; hanged for a sheep, might as well be; leave well enough alone; only too (well); sit well with; think a lot (well) of; to a fare-thee-well; very well; wear well.