Question:

He is really feeling under the weather today; he has a terrible cold. (I) feeling like the weather
(II) feeling over the weather
(III) feeling in the weather

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Idioms should not be altered word-by-word; their fixed form conveys meaning.
Updated On: Mar 24, 2026
  • Only (I) is correct
  • Only (III) is correct
  • Only (II) is correct
  • No correction required
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The Correct Option is D

Solution and Explanation


Step 1:
The idiom under the weather correctly means feeling unwell.
Step 2:
None of the suggested replacements are correct idiomatic expressions.
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