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Liked

Liked is the past tense and past participle of the verb like. Like denotes enjoyment, approval, or a sense of similarity, and its past forms are like (present), liked (past), and liked (past participle). It is a regular verb, formed by adding -ed to the base: I liked the movie; they have liked many books this year.

In grammar, liked expresses a completed action or a general preference. It can take a direct object

In modern usage, like also appears as a noun in the sense of a preference or a

Originating from Old English lician, meaning to please or be similar, like has developed into a versatile

or
be
followed
by
clauses:
“I
liked
the
food,”
“I
liked
that
you
called.”
In
perfect
tenses,
it
appears
as
have/has/had
liked.
The
passive
form
is
“was/were
liked
by
…”
or
“has
been
liked.”
The
sense
of
likeness—similarity
to
something
or
someone—uses
the
adjective
like,
not
the
participle
liked.
thing
that
is
similar.
In
social
media,
the
noun
and
verb
forms
underpin
the
concept
of
“likes,”
a
metric
for
indicating
approval
or
interest
in
posts,
photos,
or
comments;
counts
can
affect
visibility
or
engagement
on
many
platforms.
word
for
expressing
enjoyment,
preference,
or
resemblance.
It
shares
roots
with
related
Germanic
words
for
similarity
and
likeness.
Synonyms
include
enjoy,
prefer,
and
admire;
antonyms
include
dislike
and
hate.