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like or alike; of the same kind; almost but not exactly the same in nature or appearance. A. same B.

like or alike; of the same kind; almost but not exactly the same in nature or appearance. A. same B. simile C. similar D. simulate

The word that matches the description "like or alike; of the same kind; almost but not exactly the same in nature or appearance" is similar.

Analysis of options:

A. same: Means identical in every way, which is stronger than "almost but not exactly the same."

B. simile: A figure of speech comparing two things using "like" or "as" (e.g., "brave as a lion"), not an adjective describing similarity.

C. similar: Precisely means having a likeness but not being identical, fitting the description perfectly.

D. simulate: To imitate or replicate, which is a verb meaning "to假装" rather than an adjective describing similarity.

Answer: C

Language nuance matters—while "same" implies exactness, "similar" captures the subtle distinction of "almost but not exactly alike." How might overusing "same" instead of "similar" affect communication accuracy?

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