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Which is correct look or looks?
Looks and Look are not interchangeable. They are often used this way colloquially to say that someone has a generally pleasurable appearance, but this is technically incorrect. If it is your intent to phrase this sentence correctly, you should use looks.
When to use look or looks in a sentence?
“Look” is the expression on a person’s face. E.g., When he heard the news, a look of astonishment crossed his face. “Looks” is a person’s appearance. E.g. She changed her looks so radically that I could not recognize her.
Is looks plural or singular?
look Definitions and Synonyms
singular | look |
---|---|
plural | looks |
What people look like or how they look?
Summary: It’s correct to use the question word what with the preposition like, but incorrect to use the question word how with the preposition like. So what it looks like is correct, but *how it looks like is incorrect. In grammatical terms, we need to use the noun what after the preposition like, not the adverb how.
Which is correct you look or you looks?
1 Answer. “You look ugly” is correct. “You” is second person. the “-s” is used for singular third person nouns and pronouns.
Is it correct to say looks good?
Both expressions are correct English, but they mean different things. “He looks good” means he presents an agreeable appearance. “He looks well” means he appears to be healthy. In this construction both “good” and “well” are adjectives, used as predicate compliments.
What do they look like meaning?
If you ask what someone or something looks like, you are asking for a description of them.
Is you look gorgeous correct?
Perfectly correct, and in some cases idiomatic. Yes, a more succinct way to say the same thing (in most social contexts) would be, “Today you looked gorgeous.” BUT … succinctness is not everything, and there is an idiom in which you say to someone you admire, “looking good!” rather than “you look good!”
Is it correct to say you look beautiful?
In English, the letter “s” (or “es”) is added to an active verb only when the subject is third-person singular, but not when the subject is first-person singular (“I”) or second-person singular (“you”). “You look beautiful” would be correct.
Is it look good or look well?
What can I say instead of looks good?
good-looking
- attractive.
- beautiful.
- clean-cut.
- comely.
- lovely.
- pretty.
- beauteous.
- fair.