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- similar to or similarly to - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Similar is an adjective and similarly is an adverb The only grammatical word in this sentence is similarly, as it modifies the verb obtained
- Similar vs Similarly to - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The argument I am faced with is whether we should use the adverb, similarly, by essentially implicitly encapsulating the entire process to arrive at a new equation as the verb; or whether we should use the adjective, similar, to suggest that the equation or citation are similar to our equation, but leave us with the ambiguity illustrated in
- Can I use similar to at the beginning of a sentence?
Can I use "similar to" at the beginning of a sentence? For example, Similar to the proof showing x=1, we have y=1 Or I should say "it is similar to the proof showing x=1, we have y=1"
- Treat similarly named patches equally: is this correct English?
1 Treat similarly named patches equally Your first example (as quoted above) is both grammatical and expresses the sense you explained in the question Using a hyphen (ie, similarly-named patches) would explicitly indicate that similarly modifies named, not patches
- similarly to in the sentence beginning - English Language Usage . . .
Similarly to the previous version of this product, this version contains the same feature and (a long description of the product) Is the usage of "similarly to" in the sentence beginning correct?
- single word requests - Is there an adjective meaning having the same . . .
5 Besides your own suggestion of homonymous, you could try similarly titled or identically titled, depending on the degree of overlap in the respective titles (You'll find plenty of corroboration for those usages if you run Google searches on them )
- How to say the same below in academic papers?
I believe that if you establish a notation within an academic paper, then it is implicit that the notation will be understood as introduced within the scope of that paper Indeed I do not see how one could, and why one would, easily depart from this natural understanding Highlighting graphically the definition for the notation is a good idea In case you need to be explicit, people do say
- Must a comma be used after the word similarly? [duplicate]
Similarly, in photography, I also consider I know that there's usually a comma after "similarly" but the sentence in the second sentence sounds too long and has too many pauses
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