As or like?
As and like are prepositions or conjunctions. The prepositions as and like have different meanings. As + noun means ‘in the role of’, like + noun means ‘similar to’ or ‘in the same way as’. Compare
As your father, I’ll help you as much as I can.
| The speaker is the listener’s father. | Like your father, I’ll help you as much as I can.
| The speaker is not the father but wishes to act in a similar way to the father. |
We use like (but not as) to compare two things: She’s got a headache like me.
Not: She’s got a headache as me.
Like the other students, he finds it a bit difficult to get to lectures early in the morning.
Not: As the other students, he finds it …
When we compare appearance or behaviour, we use like, not as: That house looks like a castle.
Not: That house looks as a castle.
As is commonly used to talk about jobs: He worked for a long time as a teacher in Africa.
Not: … like a teacher in Africa.
The conjunctions as and like have the same meaning when used in comparisons. Like is a little more informal. Nobody understands him as I do.
Nobody understands him like I do.
See also:
As
Conjunctions
Like
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