Answer and question. The speaker talks about swimming and there is a smart software that measure the swimmers performance.
Is it ok to write "like"? for example "and like you can see"?
Assuming, that the speaker talked about "finishing" meaning the race in water is over...
would it be better to write it like: you see, like when you are finished?
A. It tracks your swimming, and like you can see where you are, I can decide like who you're head of, who's ahead of you, your paces. So, basically on the screen you see everybody's times.
Q. Does that turn practice in a little bit more of a race?
A. Yeah, yeah of course, you see like you finish, you think you swam fast, you look at the screen you see someone beat me by like half a second and you're like "alright, so I'm gonna get them on this one."
Some young adults have a habit of inserting a lot of use of the word 'like' into their speech. It really doesn't add any meaning to what is being said. So do you like understand what I am telling you like?
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Some young adults have a habit of inserting a lot of use of the word 'like' into their speech. It really doesn't add any meaning to what is being said.
So do you like understand what I am telling you like?