"Theory"
theory is one
Not sure
Graphs
Galileo was the scientist that had ideas about falling objects tested on the moon by astronauts more than 400 years after his death.
A forensic scientist with less than one year experience earns less than $10.00 per hour. One with 20 years experience earns $75.00 per hour.
The word "theory" is used differently by scientists than by the general public. The general public means "theory" as a proposed explanation for something which is not proven and which is possibly spurious; scientists may mean "theory" in that way, but may also mean "theory" as a hypothesis that has been tested multiple times and has been validated each time. Also leukocytes which mean white blood cells.
theory is one
theory is one
Holding yourself to a higher standard than the general public basically means not doing anything illegally, like fighting, drinking and driving, or doing drugs.
Differently THAN is correct. My question was: is it "differently than" or "differently from" but I can't find any examples of "differently from" in all of Google, so I have to assume "differently than" is the correct choice. 'Different FROM' is correct, from this. 'differently from' arises. Searching Google [I notice your correct but unusual capitalisation of the proper noun ' Google'] implies you are interested in the wisdom of crowds rather than grammatical correctness.
Infrared binoculars are available to the general public but are generally more expensive than conventional binoculars. The cheapest go for about $75 and can be as expensive as $600.
Masturbate in public. Doesn't get more liberal than that.
The mere thought of speaking in public is scarier than death, according to polls taken by the general public.
Of course. French people go to school. They have a public school system, however it operates differently than the school system in America.
There is absolutely nothing wrong when one's child says "poo poo" in public. Young children speak differently than adults and should be allowed to express themselves.
It depends on the setup of your state's judicial system. Some states name their court systems differently than others. "General COurt" could be the equivelant of another state's "Circuit Court" or another's "Superior Court."
Yes, but they celebrate differently than Americans do.