Not a dumb question at all.
The main point is that
well can be either an adjective or an adverb, whereas
good is generally used
only as an adjective.
The dictionary I have handy (Random House College Dictionary, Revised Edition) says "In the speech and writing of educated people, GOOD is rarely encountered as an adverb:
He did well (not good) on the test. She sees well (not good) with her new glasses. Some confusion arises because WELL can be an adjective meaning healthy."
afvatcha wrote:
My question is if well is modifiying Amy in the first sentence why can't it be modifying Amy in the second sentence instead of writes (or vice versa, if it is modifying writes in the second sentence why not feeling the first sentence). Or, is that the point. With WELL it is difficult to distinguish if it is modifying the noun or the verb.
If we meant for
well to modify
Amy in the 2nd example, I think we'd have to put
well next to
Amy. The verb
is in the 1st example essentially equates
Amy with
well, in a way that the verb
writes does not.
For example, we might say:
Well Amy writes more clearly than sick Amy did. (well as adjective)
As you can see, the two roles for
well (adjective or adverb) means you have to make sure your intended meaning is clear!