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LIKE

Like is a versatile English word with multiple grammatical roles, including preposition, conjunction, adjective, verb, adverb, and discourse marker. It conveys similarity, resemblance, preference, or indication of examples, tastes, or dispositions. The word’s etymology reflects distinct origins for its senses: the adjective like derives from Old English gelīc meaning similar, while the verb like comes from Old English lician meaning to please.

As a preposition, like introduces comparisons: "She dances like a professional." It can also signal similarity

As a verb, like means to enjoy or prefer: "I like jazz." It can also express desire

As an adjective, like means similar: "They are of a like mind." As a discourse marker or

In digital media, Like refers to a user action that signals approval or interest. The Like button

among
things:
"There
are
fruits
like
apples
and
oranges."
In
informal
usage,
like
can
precede
a
clause
as
a
quasi-conjunction,
as
in
"Like
I
said,
we
should
leave."
in
polite
requests:
"I
would
like
a
coffee."
The
phrase
"would
like"
is
a
common
polite
construction;
"to
like
doing
something"
expresses
preference
for
an
activity.
filler,
like
is
used
to
hedge
statements,
approximate
meaning,
or
quote
informal
speech:
"It
was,
like,
incredible."
Traditional
prescriptive
grammar
notes
that
overuse
in
formal
writing
is
discouraged.
became
a
major
feature
on
social
networks,
notably
Facebook
in
2009,
serving
as
an
engagement
metric
and
affecting
algorithms,
visibility,
and
monetization.
Critics
argue
it
reduces
feedback
to
a
numeric
cue
and
can
shape
behavior
or
bias
content.