资料来源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Like \Like\ (l[imac]k), v. i.
1. To be pleased; to choose.
He may either go or stay, as he best likes. --Locke.
2. To have an appearance or expression; to look; to seem to
be (in a specified condition). [Obs.]
You like well, and bear your years very well.
--Shak.
3. To come near; to avoid with difficulty; to escape
narrowly; as, he liked to have been too late. Cf. Had
like, under {Like}, a. [Colloq.]
He probably got his death, as he liked to have done
two years ago, by viewing the troops for the
expedition from the wall of Kensington Garden.
--Walpole.
{To like of}, to be pleased with. [Obs.] --Massinger.