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A

Anonymous

Oct 27, 2024

“similar with”, “similar to” which one is correct?

Both "similar with" and "similar to" can be used in English, but which one is considered correct? If both are grammatically acceptable, which phrase is more commonly used in everyday language?

6 Answers

A
Anonymous

Dec 11, 2024

It depends on the context.

You could say “Donkeys like carrots and it’s similar with horses.”

or “Donkeys are similar to horses.”

Similar to is used more commonly because the second sentence structure is used more frequently than the first.

You couldn’t use the two interchangeably, however and say for example “Donkeys are similar with horses”, in that context it is incorrect.

A
Anonymous

Feb 13, 2025

both are correct but the sentences mostly contains “similar to”

Ex- this book similar to diary

The research work similar to studying

If you use “similar with” thats make wrong meaning

for additional information wikians link – http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Why_do_you_use_similar_t…

A
Anonymous

Nov 27, 2024

You don’t say similar with, only similar to.

A
Anonymous

Dec 31, 2024

“Similar with” compares more than two objects, people, places, ideas etc.

“Similar to” compares one object, person, place to another

ex: Dogs and kids will eat almost anything; similar with sharks

Dogs will eat almost anything; similar to kids

A
Anonymous

Jan 12, 2025

“Similar to” is the correct form.

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