313 adjectives to describe difference

I believe there has been some little difference of opinion among you, especially in regard to the selection of the two fresh prefects; there are so many worthy fellows in the Sixth that one can hardly wonder at your finding some difficulty in making your choice.

The essential difference is this: that one is honor-work, and one is not.

No better illustration of the slight difference between a pennant winning machine and a losing team in the American League has occurred recently than the Boston Red Sox furnished last year.

If it be granted, that, in effect, this way does more mischiefthat a man is secretly wounded, and, though he be not sensible himself, yet the malicious world will find it out for him, yet, there is still a vast difference betwixt the slovenly butchering of a man, and the fineness of a stroke that separates the head from the body, and leaves it standing in its place.

But a woe has been denounced against the SCRIBES and OFFENBACHS(there is considerable difference between the latter and the Pharisees)of that once gay theatre.

Another marked difference between the eastern and western portions of the passes is that the former begin at the very foot of the range, while the latter can hardly be said to begin lower than an elevation of from seven to ten thousand feet.

Nobody bothered about the fundamental differences between the French and American revolutions.

The political decay of Islâm in our a day has done away with what had been left of official power to settle religious differences and any organization of spiritual authority never existed.

Amongst the latter one sometimes meets with striking differences, in cleanliness, furniture, manners, intellectual acquirements, and that delicate compound of mental elements called taste.

This was well illustrated in the history of Rome,a civic community of the same generic type with Sparta and Athens, but presenting specific differences of the highest importance.

So too we are apt to look on foreign, and still more on savage language, symbolism, ways, and customs, as indicative of a far more radical difference and greater inferiority of mental constitution and ethical instincts than really exists.

And the mere difference between colonies and motherland had produced misunderstandings on both sides.

That made an immense difference, for he was positively capable of seeing (and with sympathy) from the husband's point of view.

The principal differences between the essays as they were printed in the London Magazine and elsewhere, and as they were revised for book form by their author, are shown in the Notes, which, it should be pointed out, are much fuller in my large edition.

Hence it becomes highly probable that the well-known similarities, and no less remarkable differences between the present Faunae of India and South Africa have arisen in some such fashion as the following.

Meanwhile, his advent had made an enormous difference to the Mistertons.

Although there was no material difference between their aimsfor both wished to see their country great, free, constitutionally governed, prosperous, and advanced in civilizationyet in the ways and means employed by them to attain that aim they were diametrically opposed to each other.

"When I regard the great masses of mankind, I think there seems to be among them some characteristic differences.

The only perceptible difference between the males and females was that the males' voices were a little deeper, and they were a little taller.

They were attractive people, of all ages and very friendly, rather like Italians, but with a queer indescribable racial difference.

That makes a mighty difference.

There was a subtle difference in his manner toward Catrina when they were alone together, a suggestion of camaraderie, of a common interest and a common desire, of which she was conscious without being able to put definite meaning to it.

The tragedy for us lay in there being no choice of ways, since pacific groups had failed to create machinery to adjust vital international differences, and since the Allies each in turn, we the last, had been struck by a foe determined to settle disagreements by force.

Most of us, I suspect, are Gallios, "who care for none of these things," being of opinion that, true or fictitious, they have made no practical difference to the earth, during the period of which a record is preserved in stratified deposits.

I say substantially, because there are a good many minor differences; but as these have no bearing on the question immediately before us,which is the nature of the Globigerinoe of the chalk,it is unnecessary to speak of them.

313 adjectives to describe  difference