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LostForest 11/26/20 12:30:12 AM #1: |
Do they also say "That plant looks of a palm tree?" instead of "That plant looks like a palm tree". Or "This band sounds of The Beatles" instead of "This band sounds like The Beatles?
--- ForestLogic alt. ... Copied to Clipboard!
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harley2280 11/26/20 12:32:15 AM #3: |
Those phrases mean two different things. Smells of means it has a bit of a similar smell. Smells like means it smells exactly like it.
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LostForest 11/26/20 12:49:32 AM #4: |
harley2280 posted...
Those phrases mean two different things. Smells of means it has a bit of a similar smell. Smells like means it smells exactly like it. They don't, tho. --- ForestLogic alt. ... Copied to Clipboard!
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harley2280 11/26/20 12:54:21 AM #5: |
LostForest posted...
harley2280 posted...Those phrases mean two different things. Smells of means it has a bit of a similar smell. Smells like means it smells exactly like it. They do. I just explained the difference. --- Posted with GameRaven 3.6.0_B3 ... Copied to Clipboard!
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Dyinglegacy 11/26/20 12:58:30 AM #6: |
LostForest posted...
Do they also say "That plant looks of a palm tree?" instead of "That plant looks like a palm tree". Or "This band sounds of The Beatles" instead of "This band sounds like The Beatles?Lol --- Voted worst user on CE 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019 Current e-argument streak: 0 wins. 143,849 losses. ... Copied to Clipboard!
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LostForest 11/26/20 1:48:46 AM #7: |
harley2280 posted...
They do. I just explained the difference. I've never heard that semantic rule before. But so if I understand this correctly, if a band only somewhat resembles The Beatles, THEN they say "Oy, this band sounds of The Beatles". Is that right then? --- ForestLogic alt. ... Copied to Clipboard!
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