grammatical number - Plural or not after they differ by . . . - English . . . or: They differ by the sizes of their heads and They differ by their height or: They differ by their heights On Google I found both In French it would be all singular (the size of their head) I suspect that in English the correct form is the plural one, because in this language you tend to use the plural, e g
Differ by vs Differ in - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Please tell me which sentence is written the right way: X differs from Y in having vertebral folds X differs from Y by having vertebral folds I already read differ by is only used when it refer
Which is correct: __ is different from __ or __ is different than As someone who learned English later on in life, I was taught that different from is the correct grammar to use: this is different from that However, it seems these days everyone uses different than
What is the difference between can, could, may and might? But in what ways does it differ from the others, since all suggest ability and possibility? And crucially, what distinguishes the other three Perhaps it's a matter of tone, of context, of the speaker The question may appear quite simple but I haven't found a satisfactory answer elsewhere
meaning - Do resolution and definition differ? If so, how . . . Resolution is a technical term pertaining to the pixel count of an image, while definition has more to do with image clarity (seeing more details) - although in most cases they are used interchangeably in practice Assume you had a heavily compressed version of a screenshot, that was the same dimensions (say 1280x960) as the original but much smaller file size and also a corresponding loss in