The document purports to show evidence of the company's involvement in the scandal.
She always took a contrarian stance in our team meetings, offering unique perspectives that challenged the group's thinking.
That ain't even a question you pube face. go tell that to your demented nan, who got bullied at bingo.
The word is spelled interprets. An example sentence would be, "Each person interprets religious literature differently."
He was ostracized because he always dressed and acted differently than everyone else.
We were at higher elevation, and so we breathed and played differently.
The governor stated that the budget for the current year is inadequate to attend the state requirements.
polish and Polish.Additional answerI don't think this is correct. It's not the capitalisation that's causing the change in pronounciation, its the meaning of the word. If you had a sentence "Polish those shoes before you go" you wouldn't pronounce the "Polish" any differently to the same word in this sentence "I'm going to polish my shoes".But if you said "My shoes are Polish", then you would.
She read the passage, then listened again to the quote, which made her disbelieve what she heard, because the passage read differently.
She insisted on driving the horses her way, and he could not teach her differently, as she was too independent to follow a prosaic method.
The university does not treat any of its students differently because of their gender. Some individuals have trouble associating with those of the opposite gender.
No, it is not a preposition. The word differently is an adverb (meaning in a way that is not the same).