Language: remember the difference between AS and LIKE
AS or LIKE?
If there is no verb, just a noun , you will use a preposition.
Use like for the meaning similar to, and use as to refer to the role of a person or thing.
Compare these examples:
You look like your sister. (You look similar to your sister.) It is a comparison.
As your sister, I’d like to give you some advice. (This might be said by a woman speaking to her brother; she is his sister, so as, not like, is correct.)
You sound like a teacher! (This might be said to a
student who is explaining a grammar point to another student. It only
makes sense if the person referred to is not really a teacher.)
It’s up to her, as the teacher, to design the curriculum. (She is the teacher.)
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