How to Use Good or Well (Usage + Examples)

August 6, 2025
5 min read
By Yash, D

Is your day going good or well? And is it, I hope you’re ‘well’ or ‘good’? These words are some of the most common words to appear in email and business correspondences. Let’s acknowledge the...

How to Use Good or Well (Usage + Examples)

Is your day going good or well? And is it, I hope you’re ‘well’ or ‘good’? These words are some of the most common words to appear in email and business correspondences. Let’s acknowledge the difference.

👍🏼Usage Note

I feel well today.

She is a good student.

I feel good today.

She is a well student.

How to use good vs. well

Compare how good and well appear in these sentences:

  • I hope your day is going well.
  • I hope it’s been a good day.

The first sentence uses ‘well’ to modify ‘is going’, which are verbs or verb forms. Since ‘well’ is modifying a verb, this classifies it as an adverb, because adverbs modify verbs.

Conversely, ‘good’ is describing the ‘day’; i.e., a noun, making it an adjective, since adjectives describe nouns. In other words, we use ‘well’ to describe actions or states, and ‘good’ to describe people, places or things.

  • Good is a noun that refers to “the amount of confidence and enthusiasm, etc. that a person or a group has at a particular time”.
  • Well is mostly an adjective that describes being “connected with principles of right and wrong behaviour”. As a noun, morals refers to “standards or principles of good behaviour

“Good” / “well”, used in sentences

Examples: “good”, used in sentences
The piano was in good condition.

Your work is just not good enough.

The results were pretty good.

Examples: “well”, used in sentences
They played well in the tournament.

The team work well together.

The kids all behaved well.

The conference was very well organized.

Similar words

Word Synonyms
good acceptable, excellent, exceptional, favorable, great, marvellous, positive, satisfactory, satisfying, superb, valuable, wonderful
well adequately, easily, far, freely, fully, properly, quite, right, smoothly
💡Study Tip

“good” vs. “well,” associate “good” with nouns (describing them) and “well” with verbs (modifying actions).

Word origin (of good/well)

Old English gōd (with a long “o”) “excellent, fine; valuable; desirable, favorable, beneficial; full, entire, complete;” of abstractions, actions, etc., “beneficial, effective; righteous, pious;” of persons or souls, “righteous, pious, virtuous;” probably originally “having the right or desirable quality,” from Proto-Germanic *gōda- “fitting, suitable”.

“in a satisfactory manner,” Old English wel “abundantly, very, very much; indeed, to be sure; with good reason; nearly, for the most part,” from Proto-Germanic *wel-…from PIE root.

Read about other commonly confused words

Practice: Good or well?

Question 1 of 5

She sings very ______.


He is a ______ student.


The team played ______ in the tournament.


She gave a ______ performance.


Are you feeling ______ today?




FAQs

How do I use “good”?
+

Use ‘good’ as an adjective to describe nouns (people, places, things). It tells you what kind of student someone is or the condition of something, like “a good student” or “in good condition.”

How do I use “well”?
+

Use ‘well’ mostly as an adverb to modify verbs or verb forms. It describes actions or states, like how someone “played well,” how things “work well,” or how something was “well organized.”

What do good and well modify?
+

‘Good’ describes nouns (people, places, things), acting as an adjective. ‘Well’ modifies verbs (actions or states), functioning as an adverb.

Is “I feel good today” correct?
+

According to the usage note provided, “I feel good today” is listed as incorrect adverb usage. The post indicates “I feel well today” is correct as an adverb modifying the verb “feel.”

How can I remember the difference?
+

A study tip from the post suggests associating ‘good’ with describing nouns and ‘well’ with modifying verbs (describing actions). This helps distinguish their roles.

Yash, D. "How to Use Good or Well (Usage + Examples)." Grammarflex, Aug 14, 2025, https://grammarflex.com/good-or-well/.

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