GMA Network: Heart Evangelista looks back at yearbook profile: 'Lahat ng sinulat ko diyan basically came true'
Heart Evangelista looks back at yearbook profile: 'Lahat ng sinulat ko diyan basically came true'
The Conversation on MSN: High school yearbooks focus on the fun students had, obscuring the pain people also experienced
High school students will soon take part in a more than 160-year-old tradition in American education: receiving yearbooks at the end of the school year. In an era of high-speed ephemeral images and ...
High school yearbooks focus on the fun students had, obscuring the pain people also experienced
When using looks (meaning appearance), I would stick to that definition (different from look): plural noun a person's physical appearance a young woman with wholesome good looks I never chose people just because of their looks. She had lost her looks. Normally looks is only used with people. Otherwise, I would use appearance: The restaurant dish must deliver on both taste and appearance. You ...
"It looks like" is usually used to imply something we are almost certain about. There is a saying: "If it looks like a duck, and it walks like a duck, chances are... it's a duck." When we say "it seems like", we are focusing on the impression given by the subject.
With respect to the words at issue, grammatical sentences include: It looks as if it's going to fall. It looks like it's going to fall. Since like and as if mean the same in the context of your sentence, it would be redundant and wrong to repeat them one after another.