Englishfor English speakers
succeed
Verb
—
If something succeeds, it has happens the way somebody wants it to happen.
He succeeded in getting everyone to like him.
—
If you succeed, people recognize that you are good at what you do.
It's more difficult for women to succeed in business.
—
If mathx/math succeeds mathy/math, mathx/math replaces mathy/math.
The new king succeeded his father.
DVDs succeeded VHS as the main way to watch movies.
as
Preposition
—
A word that is used to compare two things that are equal.
As you know, we need more workers.
I baked the cake as my mother used to.
The room looks just as it did when I was a child.
The speech, as he remembered it, was very powerful.
Interesting as it seems, I don't think I'll get it.
He was as big as a mountain.
—
A word that is used to show that two things happened at the same time.
Just as I went out, it started to rain.
We sleep as the world turns in darkness.
—
A word that is used to show why something happens.
As I couldn't understand French, I didn't watch the film.
as
Adverb
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A word that is used to compare two things that are equal. (Used before adjectives)
You are younger than I am, but nearly as tall.
This is not as good as it was last time.