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The phrase "like if" can be used in written English, although it may sound more informal or conversational.
It is often used to introduce a hypothetical situation or make a comparison. Example: "Like if I had won the lottery, I would buy a house in the countryside." This sentence is using "like if" to imagine a hypothetical scenario of winning the lottery and what the speaker would do in that situation. Another example: "She dances like if she's floating on air." Here, "like if" is used to make a comparison between the way the person dances and the feeling of floating on air.
Exact(57)
I always like if somebody's broke.
I won't like if you don't come!"?
Some people don't like if someone breaks jokes on them.
Park wherever you like if you don't have a driver.
"Like if I was home".
Like, if I had Pres.
Like if I'm eating.
What would the world be like if,….
Similar(3)
and quasiconcave-like if is quasiconvex-like.
(2) is called quasiconvex-like if, for each,, (2.6).
(i type (P) (or firmly nonexpansive-like) if (1.3).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com