The Extended Edition is the one where at the end Lemonade Mouth preforms "Livin On A High Wire"
They are both the same film. The theatrical cut is the 145 minute long version seen in cinemas. The extended cut is six minutes longer, and includes footage previously unseen in theatres.
the only real difference is that the last airbender is the american version and the legend of aang is the european version....
No the winner is the same. There is no difference between the Canadian version and the American version.
spawn is pg13 directors cut is r rated
The only difference between the us and the UK version of R.H.P.S is not much. The difference is on extra song on the UK version at the end of the movie.
The theatrical version is what is shown in theaters and extended version is extra things that were not shown in theaters
The Extended version has a the song "What Does He Want." That's about it.
In Extended version you have 3D Tools to work with 3D Objects.
CS4 Extended is the legal version that you must buy. CS4 Portable is a free, illegal version that does all the same things as CS4 Extended, the only difference is that you can't add plug-ins
The Extended edition of the lord of the ring movies has extra scenes, music, and lines. The platinum version does not have this. There is about 30 minutes of extra scenes in each movie. Sometimes the information in the Extended version helps you understand it more. With the extended version the movie is alot more like the book.
Toprol-XL is merely an extended-release version of the same drug as is found in Lopressor.
IGCSE Core covers essential topics, while IGCSE Extended covers a broader range. The core is less challenging, while Extended requires deeper understanding. The grading scale and eligibility may differ between the two levels.
Yes. Lost Chapters is an extended version of Fable 1.
There is no difference between the two. 'awaiting' is just a version of 'waiting'.
They are both the same film. The theatrical cut is the 145 minute long version seen in cinemas. The extended cut is six minutes longer, and includes footage previously unseen in theatres.
There is no difference. In American English, the verb is to orient; in British English, the verb is to orientate.Not true! 'To orient' is perfectly correct British English and is preferred by many of us to the unnecessarily and pointlessly extended version 'to orientate'.
I don't think there's a difference besides the voicing.