Fundamentals Of English Grammar

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
EXERCISE 35. THE SAME, SIMILAR, DIFFERENT, LIKE, and ALIKE. (Chart 9-12)
Directions: Use the same (as), MIar (to), d@mt (jhm), like, and alike in the
sentences. There may be more than one possible response in some of them. Use whatever
response sounds best to you.


  1. Jennifer and Jack both come from Rapid City. In other words, they come from
    the saw town.

  2. This city is tkr saw as / sil*\ilav to / like my hometown. Both are quiet
    and conservative.

  3. You and I don't agree. Your ideas are mine.

  4. Eric never wears clothes two days in a row.

  5. Ants are fascinating. An ant colony is a
    well-disciplined army.

  6. In terms of shape, cabbage looks lettuce. But cabbage and
    lettuce don't taste

  7. A male mosquito is not size a female
    mosquito. The female is larger.

  8. I'm used to strong coffee. I think the coffee Americans drink tastes
    dishwater! ,., r i

  9. "Meet" and "meat" are homonyms; i.e., they have
    pronunciation.

  10. The pronunciation of "caught" is the pronunciation of
    ''cot."
    1 1. "Flower" hii" pronunciation .-. -.tq&'.n.

  11. My dictionary is yours.

  12. Trying to get through school without
    studying is wins to
    go swimming without getting wet.

  13. A crocodile and an alligator are
    in appearance.

  14. If it looks a duck,
    quacks a duck, and
    walks a duck, it is a duck.
    (a humomus saying)


274 CHAPTER 9

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