Similar(60)
Instead, to name a trope should be likened with baptizing a child or with introducing a man "present in the flesh," i.e., ostensively (Williams 1997 [1953]: 114).
In this sense, invasives should be considered as a subset of naturalised species capable of spreading considerably and with harmful effects, a definition which could also be likened with the terms 'transformers' and 'weeds' as defined by Richardson et al. (2000) and Pyšek et al. (2004).
Hospitals with a lack of freedom were likened by five people to prisons, with service users fulfilling the role of prisoners receiving punishment.
Proponents were likened to communists, he says.
The committee says reading such documents has been likened to "engaging with Shakespeare".
Our government was likened to Big Brother, with the ACLU officially calling it "beyond Orwellian".
Interestingly, the spatial impairments found in Williams syndrome have been likened to those with right hemisphere damage [60].
It could also be likened to his friendship with Rogen, only with Apatow now in the older person's role, so the movie feels like an autobiography with multiple perspectives.
The effects of the PDO on global warming can be likened to a staircase, with warming leveling off for periods, typically of more than a decade, and then bursting upward.
While some of this enjoyment can be likened to spending time with an old friend, Mr. Eastwood is also an adept director of his own performances and, perhaps more important, a canny manipulator of his own iconographic presence.
The process of radiotherapy has been likened to a chain, with the whole process being only as strong as its weakest link.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com