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The phrase "a church like" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when comparing a church to another church or type of church, often to describe similarities in style, architecture, or function.
Example: "I visited a church like the one in my hometown, and it brought back many memories."
Alternatives: "a church similar to" or "a church resembling".
Exact(33)
Go to a church (like Lumbridge).
But why would anyone build a church like that?
Simbur, one of the village elders, explained the poles were "like a church, like a mosque".
Having an artist-in-residence at a church like Grace is unusual, though not unprecedented.
"We would not be able to build a church like this today," he said.
I wrote, it was like a church, like a god- less tabernacle was God.
Similar(27)
Recently, a church-like steel skeleton appeared on the site of an old church inside Skopje's fortress (pictured).
There is a chasteness, a church-like quality in the voicings of his chords and in the plainspoken tone of his voice.
Step inside the Co-operative Winery in L'Espluga de Francolí by Lluís Domènech i Montaner and a church-like silence descends.
Great zinc doors slide open to reveal a church-like interior, with a central nave marked by rows of columns and criss-crossing trusses, while the side aisles are strewn with straw bales.
Vaguely Moorish-looking, but with a church-like spire, it is actually a synagogue, the Magen David, built in Kolkata's Raj heyday, when the then capital of India had 10,000 Jews.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com