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The phrase "a feel like" is not correct in written English.
It seems to be a mistaken combination of "feel like" and an article, which does not make sense in standard usage.
Example: "I feel like going for a walk."
Alternatives: "I have a feeling" or "I sense that."
Exact(8)
Even "Juno" and "Easy A" feel like relics. .
LOCATION The hotel cultivates a "feel like a local" charm, and its location, at Kenmare and Elizabeth Streets in NoLIta — on a residential block but within easy walking distance of SoHo, the Lower East Side, Chinatown, Little Italy and the East Village — helps greatly in this regard.
"Brands we work with a feel like they're trapped in their Facebook," Harrison said.
MR: To be honest, this whole album has a feel like that.
But turn the cuff and the illusion is shattered — the interior is as fuzzy as a fleece, with a feel like a well-worn sweat shirt.
Favorites Include in your cooler a thermos of iced coffee (it is summertime, after all), bottled beverages and sweet and salty snacks that make it a feel like a genuine road trip.
Similar(52)
Patients received either an "as-much-as-can (AMAC)" stop rule instruction, or a "feel-like-discontinuing (FLDC)" stop rule instruction.
Everybody suffered at least a bit throughout the day: By 1 p.m., the temperature was 95 degrees, and the 47percentt humidity created a feel-like temperature of 105 degrees.
He must have a felt like a Northumbria Police horse.
The resulting fibers form a felt like fiber tissue that was used as an electrode.
A boy feels like a boy.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com