<DIV>'Like' is very San Fernando, isn't it? Do you hear 'like' used in California all the time?<BR><BR>
<BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid"><BR>--- Adrian Tymes <WINGCAT@PACBELL.NET>wrote:<BR><BR>> --- spike <SPIKE66@COMCAST.NET>wrote:<BR>> > So perhaps like is a de-exactifyer, or serves the <BR>> > purpose of generalizing, perhaps fuzzifying<BR>> > statements.<BR>> <BR>> Aye. If you check the dictionary definition, that<BR>> is exactly what "like" was originally intended for.<BR>> "Something like", "approximately like", and that<BR>> sort of thing.<BR>> <BR>> It may also be used to express uncertainty. Like,<BR>> if I'm having a hard time nailing down the exact<BR>> description, I can spout off something like it and<BR>> tack on "like"s to flag that this isn't necessarily<BR>> precise. It may be that I happen to hit it spot on,<BR>> but if I'm not personally confident that I have,<BR>> then "like" flags my own unease.<BR><BR><BR>'Likely' seems to carry the
uncertainty, or<BR>probability, that can be inherent in 'like.' Examples:<BR><BR>(1) "Is it likely to happen?"<BR>(2) "What is the likelihood of it happening?"<BR><BR>Even if I say "It's extremely likely to happen,"<BR>there's still a degree of probability implied. And<BR>saying "It's 100% likely to happen" seems to misuse<BR>'likely' and we should instead say "It's 100% certain<BR>to happen." However, the probably factor inherent in<BR>'likely' does not seem apparent in the case that<BR>someone uses 'like' to say: <BR><BR>"He looks exactly like the man who robbed me." <BR><BR>Here 'like' seems properly used and does not indicate<BR>degrees of similarity. 'Similar' seems to inherently<BR>denote less than 100% identity and if we substitute it<BR>in the sentence <BR><BR>"He looks exactly similar the man who robbed me." <BR><BR>then 'similar' seems to be misused as was the case<BR>with 'likely' when we said "It's 100% likely to<BR>happen." So irrespective of the original definition
of<BR>'like,' I think it can be used in statements that<BR>imply a 100% identity relation and thus 'like' can<BR>denote identity relations ranging from 0% to 100%. <BR><BR>~Ian<BR><BR><BR>__________________________________________________<BR>Do You Yahoo!?<BR>Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around <BR>http://mail.yahoo.com <BR>_______________________________________________<BR>extropy-chat mailing list<BR>extropy-chat@lists.extropy.org<BR>http://lists.extropy.org/mailman/listinfo/extropy-chat<BR></BLOCKQUOTE></DIV><p>
<hr size=1>Celebrate Yahoo!'s 10th Birthday! <br>
<a href="http://birthday.yahoo.com/netrospective/">Yahoo! Netrospective: 100 Moments of the Web</a>