Which preposition to use with discriminate
Froebel discriminates between impression and expression, or taking in and giving out, and although he constantly emphasised that the child takes in by giving, it is convenient to recognise this distinction.
Perhaps a few less closely related synonyms are then listed for you to discriminate in a similar way.
One could perhaps discriminate from behind between a blockhead, a fool and a man of genius.
Under the articles of confederation there had been no national judiciary, and state courts often discriminated against foreigners and citizens of other states.
It will usually be found in studying the borrowings which the masters have made from such sources as the Gesta Romanorum that the portions which they have discriminated as worth taking from any one tale have been the only artistically essential elements which the narrative contains; the remainder, which they have rejected, is either untrue to art or unnecessary to the plot's development.
So may we likewise discriminate among degrees of age.
even the written words of men she could discriminate by touch.
The characters of Shakspeare and Ben Jonson are, indeed, discriminated with much skill; but surely something might have been said, if not of Massinger and Beaumont and Fletcher, yet at least of Congreve and Otway, who are involved in the sweeping censure passed on "the wits of Charles.
It is an art so balanced, that when it tells us, with no special emphasis, how the Trojans came on with a din like the clangour of a flock of cranes, but the Achaians came on in silence, the temper of the two hosts is discriminated for the whole poem; or, in the supreme instance, when it tells us how the old men looked at Helen and said, "No wonder the young men fight for her!"
As the memory-images denoted by words are weaker, fainter, and less clearly discriminated than the original sensations, it comes to pass that a number of similar ideas of memory receive a common name.
He appeared to be imbued with the true spirit of piety, to be learned in his vocation without ostentation, and discriminating without ultraism.
"One cannot discriminate at the charity ball," Drusilla had stoutly maintained.
In this work, it is assumed, that quantity, not laboriously ascertained by "a great variety of rules applied from the Greek and Latin Prosody," but discriminated on principles of our ownquantity, dependent in some degree on the nature and number of the letters in a syllable, but still more on the presence or absence of stressis the true foundation of our metre.