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lijkend

Lijkend is a Dutch word that functions as the present participle or adjective form of the verb lijken, which means to seem or to resemble. It denotes that something is resembling or appearing to be something else. In usage, it can describe likeness or similarity in descriptive or analytical contexts.

The form lij kend / lijkend is used to introduce likeness in participial phrases, often in literary,

Etymology goes back to the verb lijken, and the sense of appearance or resemblance is common across

Usage notes: Lijkend is relatively formal and more likely to appear in literature, art criticism, or scholarly

Related terms include gelijken (to resemble), gelijkend (similar), vergelijkbaar (comparable), and soortgelijk (similar). The core idea

decorative,
or
critical
writing.
For
example,
a
statement
might
refer
to
a
“beeld
lijkend
op
een
historisch
figuur”
to
indicate
that
the
statue
resembles
a
historical
figure.
The
participle
can
also
appear
in
reduced
relative
clauses
to
express
resemblance
within
a
broader
description.
In
standard
modern
Dutch,
the
present
participle
is
written
as
lijkend
(often
seen
as
lijkend
in
older
texts);
both
spellings
convey
the
same
meaning
in
practice.
related
Germanic
languages.
The
meaning
of
lijkend
is
wholly
about
appearance
or
likeness,
not
about
substance
or
authorship.
writing
than
in
everyday
speech.
It
is
distinct
from
the
noun
lijk,
which
means
corpse;
the
two
are
homographs
but
clearly
distinguished
by
context.
centers
on
resemblance,
not
identity,
making
lijkend
a
precise
tool
for
describing
likeness
in
Dutch
prose.