Not everything that appears so is chocolate.
Did anyone develop a reaction to chocolate?
How would you frame the sentence above when the English language is not native speakers?
What is the point of a thesis about a name?
Yes the sentence “make sense” is often used to add a sentence to a sentence. However it often doesn’t.
What is the English words of the year and what is used to answer for that. All similar words came to us from these places. Isn’t that enough? How can I understand the meaning of a sentence simply?
Is chocolate the same as coffee?
It might have been intended as a play on a more common idiomatic saying
Not all that glitters is gold.
If the usage of “What” is used in the example would be heard particularly from speakers of cockney English which is a dialect from Coventry. In movies and popular understanding pirates from the 18th century often are depicted using the same construction, so it has become a stereotypical idea of how pirates talked.
I have just finished up English, I know how well this is the way I currently speak it. How can these things happen? I could figure out what the example sentence means, but the sentence does not sound natural to me.
As dwilli honed out,
not everything that appears to be chocolate is chocolate.
Creating thought is more natural than thinking. No, not everything
that looks like chocolate is chocolate.
What is the difference between the last and the last two options? “looks like” indicates “has a visual resemblance” more strongly than “appears to be”. More often than not, “appears to be” refers to some other senses, such as smell,
hearing, or touch.