different with different from - WordReference Forums It may be different (with from) each family, but there are similarities How would you describe the difference between "different with" and "different from" in the given sentence?
Difference in pronunciation between: a, á, ã, â and à Could I get a few people to explain the difference in pronunciation between a, á, ã, â and à in Portuguese using English comparisons (if possible)? I can't seem to find a thread or other Web site that addresses them each clearly Thanks!
differing vs different - WordReference Forums "There have been widely differing versions in the newspapers about the prison siege " Why not use "different" here? Both are right? If right, same meaning? If same which is common and better in native English?
A variety of vs varieties of - WordReference Forums Hello everyone, what's the difference between 'a variety of' and 'varieties of' in the following sentences? And are they both correct? There is a variety of flowers in the market There are varieties of flowers in the market
Kind of singular? Kind of plural? Kinds of singular? Kinds of plural . . . There are different kind s of chocolate -There different kind of dogs There are different kind s of dog s ('dog' refers to the whole species; ''dogs' refers to lots of dogs) There are different kinds of fruits fruit Food can be countable or uncountable I thought that chocolate could be countable as well when referring to different kinds
What is the difference between oba (obě) and obojí (oboje)? So the rule seems to be that if you're choosing 2 things of the same kind gender you use oba obě and if you're choosing referring to 2 things of a different kind gender you use obojí oboje
quelque chose (de) + adjectif - genre accord de J'aurais aussi proposé "quelque chose d'autre", mais votre deuxième solution, DearPrudence, me plaît encore mieux! Et pour vous faciliter la compréhension de la structure, Tom: on pourrait dire: 'une chose différente', comme 'des conditions différentes' parce qu'ici, 'différent' est un adjectif qui s'accorde; par contre, après 'quelque chose' ou 'quelqu'un', on ajoute toujours un 'de