As if
A. You can use as if to say
how somebody or something looks/sounds/feels etc.:
* That house looks as if it's
going to fall down.
* Ann sounded as if she had a
cold, didn't she?
* I've just come back from
holiday but I feel tired and depressed. I don't feel as if I've just had a
holiday.
Compare:
* You look tired. (look +
adjective)
You look as if you haven't
slept. (look + as if + subject + verb)
* Tom sounded worried. (sound
+ adjective)
Tom sounded as if he was
worried. (sound + as if + subject + verb)
You can use as though instead
of as if:
* Ann sounds as though she's
got a cold. (= as if she's got a cold.)
B. You can also say It
looks/sounds/smells as if (or as though):
* Sandra is very late, isn't
she? It looks as if she isn't coming.
* We took an umbrella with us
because it looked as if it was going to rain.
* Do you hear that music next
door? It sounds as if they're having a party.
* It smells as though someone
has been smoking in here.
After It looks/sounds/smells,
many people use like instead of as if/as though:
* It looks like Sandra isn't
coming.
C. You can use as if with
other verbs to say how somebody does something:
* He ran as if he was running
for his life.
* After the interruption, the
speaker carried on talking as if nothing had happened.
* When I told them my plan,
they looked at me as if I was mad.
D. After as if we sometimes
use the past when we are talking about the present.
For example:
* I don't like Norma. She
talks as if she knew everything.
The meaning is not past in
this sentence. We use the past ('as if she knew') because the idea is not real:
Norma does not know
everything. We use the past in the same way with if and wish (see Unit 38).
Some more examples:
* She's always asking me to do
things for her--as if I didn't have enough to do. (I do have enough to do)
* Harry's only 40. Why do you
talk about him as if he was an old man? (he isn't an old man)
When you use the past in this
way, you can use were instead of was:
* Why do you talk about him as
if he were an old man?
* They treat me as if I were
(or was) their own son. (I'm not their son)
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