Differentiate

//dɪf.əˈɹɛn.ʃi.eɪt//

"Differentiate" in a Sentence (24 examples)

We must be able to differentiate between objects and situations.

English doesn't differentiate between the verbs "ser" and "estar".

Do you know how to differentiate between poison ivy and poison oak plants?

There's a tendency to conflate proposing a solution with actually solving the problem. I think it's important to differentiate between the two.

Brussels seems to be unable to differentiate between refugees and immigrants.

It's difficult to differentiate between twins.

Pigeons, if trained, can differentiate paintings of Picasso from those of Monet.

We differentiate between living and dead objects.

You need to differentiate between reality and fiction.

Those who are completely lost, those who believe they know how to differentiate an idiot from a miser or petty, when there can be a whole world between them, those who do not know that a man lives the same misery as they, they must know that he is missing a half, too.

Show 14 more sentences

A humble instance of Ablaut may be quoted which took place in the seventeenth century, when the word then was differentiated into the two forms then and than.

What differentiates an alligator from a crocodile?

Taste differentiates a gentleman—for instance, Mr. Addison—from a Hottentot or Laplander.

How do you differentiate a fake smile from a genuine one?

In the earlier chapters uncouth proper names are reduced to a minimum, but the Index refers by name to specific places and persons only generally mentioned in the earlier pages. For instance, the states of Lu and Chêng on pages 22 and 29 : it is hard enough to differentiate Ts‘i, Tsin, Ts‘in, and Ts‘u at the outstart, without crowding the memory with fresh names until the necessity for it absolutely arises.

The mass of the rich and poor are differentiated by their incomes and nothing else, and the average millionaire is only the average dishwasher dressed in a new suit.

he refused to instruct that actual intent to harm or recklessness had to be found before punitive damages could be awarded, or that a verdict for respondent should differentiate between compensatory and punitive damages.

Like most teaching, differentiating is a mix of art and science. When it works, "it's like a jazz rhythm," said Carol Tomlinson, an education professor at the University of Virginia and an expert on differentiation.

Moreover, children of STIP-teachers who showed many types of differentiation activities learnt more than children of STIP-teachers who differentiated less.

I use technology to differentiate in my Algebra classroom in many different ways. Sometimes, I put this technology in the hands of students and sometimes I use it myself to streamline a process.

In Chapter IV we learned that every animal consists of a body, or soma, formed of cells that are differentiated from the germ cells usually at an early stage of development.

Osteoblasts are derived from stromal cells, a type of connective tissue cell in the bone marrow, whereas osteoclasts differentiate from macrophages, which are tissue-bound derivatives of monocytes, a type of white blood cell (see p. 402).

There is no discernable tendency, however, for the differentiates to fall into two extremities, as would be expected if they were trending toward distinct eutectics in a residua system.

This latter terminology is particularly favored by Soviet petrologists, e.g.. Bogatikov et al. (1985), who believe that any magma typically exhibits both agpaitic and miascitic differentiates.

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