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  1. We use would like or ’d like to offer something to someone in a polite way or to ask them to do something politely (requests), or politely to say what we want. We use the to-infinitive form of verbs that follow: …

  2. used interjectionally in informal speech often to emphasize a word or phrase (as in "He was, like, gorgeous") or for an apologetic, vague, or unassertive effect (as in "I need to, like, borrow some money") 4. : nearly, approximately. the actual interest is more like 18 percent.

  3. If you say that someone is behaving like something or someone else, you mean that they are behaving in a way that is typical of that kind of thing or person. Like is used in this way in many fixed expressions, for example to cry like a baby and to watch someone like a hawk.

  4. similar to or in the same way as someone or something: I wish I were slim like you. They were acting like children. He looks like his father. It sounded like Harry. Fewer examples. Tim looks just like his father. He drives like a maniac. She dealt with the problem like a true professional.

  5. like meaning, definition, what is like: similar to something else, or happening ...: Learn more.

  6. adjective. , (Poetic) lik·er, lik·est. of the same form, appearance, kind, character, amount, etc.: I cannot remember a like instance. corresponding or agreeing in general or in some noticeable respect; similar; analogous: drawing, painting, and like arts. bearing resemblance. Dialect. likely or probable:

  7. Inserted into spoken sentences before or after a word, phrase, or clause, apparently without meaning or syntactic function, but possibly for emphasis. It's, like, hot. Webster's New World. (Liverpudlian, Geordie) Used to place emphasis upon a statement.

  8. When we use like to mean ‘similar to’, we can put words and phrase such as a bit, just, very, so and more before it to talk about the degree of similarity: It’s a bit like skiing but there’s no snow. Isn’t that just like the bike we bought you for your birthday? That smells very like garlic. The car was more like a green than a blue ...

  9. Like is used in this way in many fixed expressions, for example, to cry like a baby and to watch someone like a hawk. I was shaking all over, trembling like a leaf. 6. conjunction. Like is sometimes used as a conjunction in order to say that something appears to be the case when it is not.

  10. The meaning of like has to do with being similar: maybe you sound just like your sister when you answer the phone. Or, in giving an example, like is the go-to word to introduce it: "We enjoy sports like hockey."

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