Upload
hilda-e-colby
View
73
Download
1
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
Welcome to our #6 Lesson in our Erroneous English Series. Are you confused by how to use "like" or "as" ? Today you are going to learn how to use them correctly the first time!
Citation preview
Erroneous English Lesson #6
By: H. E. Colby, author of Top 150 Business English Ace Vocabulary Words
a production of businessenglishace.com
Erroneous English Lesson #6
“I work like a waitress”
or “I work as a waitress.”
Erroneous English Lesson
Many English learners make the same common mistakes over and over.
Our new series, Erroneous English, helps you avoid these errors before you make them!
Sign up for the Business English Update for another Erroneous English Lesson every week.
Erroneous English Lesson #5
Use as to talk about a job or function.
I work as a waitress.
Erroneous English Lesson #5
In comparisons: “as (adjective) as.”
Luis is as hungry as a horse.
Erroneous English Lesson #5
Conjunction: as + clause (subject and verb)
Hyko is going to Harvard, as her mother did.
Erroneous English Lesson #5
In comparisons: like as preposition + noun or pronoun
Luis is just like his father.
Erroneous English Lesson #5
In comparisons: like, as if/as though
There is no difference in meaning between the 3 forms.
Erroneous English Lesson #5
In comparisons: like, as if, as though
Hyko looks like she has seen a ghost.
Hyko looks as if she has seen a ghost.
Hyko looks as though she has seen a ghost.
Erroneous English Lesson
Professor Colby, author of How to Be a Business English Ace,
has been helping students reach their English goals for many
years.
Sign up for the Business English Ace Newsletter for more English
tips! Don’t miss your next Erroneous English lesson!