Which preposition to use with differents
Then I had applied the term superhuman to it, with an almost instinctive knowledge that the creature was something different from the brute-beast.
"Doubtless, we are far different in many things.
In this room Her Majesty the Queen may be imagined enjoying the balls given to the youthful aristocracy, something different to the State dances in the larger room; and, doubtless, by a long way, much more enjoyable.
The case is different with the unfortunate subject of this letter, the author of Endymion, to whose feelings and situation I entreat you to allow me to call your attention.
we are no longer at liberty to say, "As different as Chalk and Cheese.
It is very different for a man.
Now, I challenge all the ASS-TROLOGERS and CONJURERS, throughout the whole kingdom, to demonstrate that all the whimsey-headed opinions which different men retain of different actions, together with their being so vastly different at different times, one from another; I say, I call upon them ALL to prove, that they are (wholly) owing to the STARRY influences!
Is there in this day and generation a spirit of lawlessness greater or different than that that has always characterized human society?
Things have effects so different on the minds of different men.
The position was very different about Beersheba.
He had not once said: "Things will be different after a while."
And yet she is only different by a tuft of white feathers.
But it was so different without the love-light of your eyes and the pressure of your dear hand, that I felt the tears gathering, and had all manner of sad thoughts.
It now seemed to Agony that Miss Amesbury's manner had been different toward her in the last few days, on the trip.
With a more home-like feelin' things might have been different between us, Hanna.
Perhaps some will chiefly feel not so much that his stories are different among themselves, but that they are not strongly anythinganybody'sin particular, that they lack strong personality.
Things look different out of doors, and to Miss Nugent the arms of both gentlemen seemed somewhat stick-like in their proportions.
And when we remember also, that this is another one of the things for which no uniform rule can be adopted, owing to the many circumstances which go to make an engine so different under different conditions, we find it very difficult to give you the light on this part of your duty which we would wish to.
I never wanted to be different until, well, until nowto be honest.
Why should not these proportions have been different during the Mesozoic epoch?
Are you not different beside them?