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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
- Word for separating a group of similar-but-not-the-same things into . . .
1 You could say that you clustered them into domains A, B, C and D Clustering things in the data analysis or machine learning sense is when you put points together (in the same cluster) that are more similar to each other than to other points (in other clusters) Points in the same cluster are normally not identical
- phrase requests - Is there a word to describe words that sound similar . . .
Is there a word, phrase, or other descriptor, that describes two or more words that have a similar - but very specifically not identical - sound to each other, but which have different meanings?
- meaning - Using similar to mean identical - English Language . . .
Similar and identical have different meaning to be precise But if you have noticed people using it, that could be because many times people start using the first word that comes to their mind and they don't evaluate that word to be precisely what they are trying to say
- in the same vein as vs. in a similar vein to vs. along a similar vein
The other options "in a similar vein to" and "along the same vein" sound a little odd to my ear I guess you'd be better off using "in a similar way to" and "along the same lines" instead
- 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"
- Is similar in A and B means equal to similar between A and B?
The mean activities were similar between group A and group B The study demonstrated similarity in terms of antimicrobial activity between product A and product B
- word choice - Identical Meaning of similar to and like - English . . .
Two different Questions, japhwil Broadly, "similar to" and "like" are interchangeable (and MS should leave your style choices to you) Quite separately, I think you'll have a hard time explaining the difference you suggest between " A is similar to B" indicating objects are quite distinct, and "A is like B" suggesting they are practically the
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