The grammatically correct form is, "different from".
The correct way is, "His shirt is different frommine"
Neither. The correct phrase is "different from". The phrase "different than" is commonly used in the US, but it is not grammatically correct. 'Than' should only be used when degrees of comparison are applied, as in "less than", "fewer than" or "more than".
It is called irony or sarcasm when someone says something with a different or opposite meaning than the literal interpretation.
It would be more accurate to say "faster than him."
It is subjective to say that Japanese sounds better than Chinese as preferences for language sound are personal and cultural. Both languages have unique sounds and characteristics that appeal to different people.
The correct way is, "different from yours".
Different 'from' is grammatically correct.Different 'from' is correct.
The correct way is, "His shirt is different frommine"
Different from is correct. Consider saying 'This marble differs FROM this marble' and apply it to different. 'Different than' is an Americanism. However, it's preferable to the heinous 'different to', which has become commonplace in Britain.
Different from is correct. Different than is not correct, although it is very common The mistake is made by analogy with the comparative form, which does use than. We say, for example, these books are different from one another; the first one is bigger than the second.
We can say that, politics then is different from the politics now, because, politics then was less democratic than politics now.
Bichon frise. No different than English
it's no different than in english. just say it with a french accent. oh, leave, ia
Antonyms are words that are the opposite of other words. If I say "different" the antonym would be "alike". Synonyms are words that has the same meaning as other words. If I say "different" a synonym would be "various".
Nope
No, it is just quicker to say Inter than Inter Milan.
It's no different than saying "I love you" to anyone else.