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Example sentences for "quite different"

  • But, owing to the prince having come to be represented as a Dane, patriotic reasons have suggested to the {25} Danish poets and historians a quite different conclusion to the story.

  • Kemble might have instanced the way in which one and the same hero reappears in the pages of Saxo Grammaticus, with somewhat different parentage or surroundings, as if he were a quite different person.

  • Travelling in these parts is quite different now, but I have a most wretched recollection of the long walks in the cold mist, no sound but the cry of the marmots--yet one always had a wish to go on, not back.

  • The second part of the story is quite different.

  • However, it does not signify, for you have only to last three or four months; but these beautiful thick foreign leaves, with them it is quite different, for they have got to be beautiful always.

  • But if the French succeed in making a large African army available for a European theatre, the estimate of strength of the French army as compared with ours will be quite different.

  • English interests also lie in a quite different field, and are not coincident with those of France.

  • The situation is quite different in the case of a State.

  • This happy Man is dismissed, and my Lord can turn himself to a Business of a quite different Nature, and offhand give as good an Answer as any great Man is obliged to.

  • There is another way of Reasoning which seldom fails, tho it be of a quite different Nature to that I have last mentioned.

  • It loses this quality, and assumes a quite different one, only when man, once the time has come for overcoming an illusion, insists on clinging to it.

  • It was in this way that he was led to the determination of the so-called mechanical equivalent of heat, shortly before the same discovery was made in a quite different manner by Joule.

  • For these sensations are qualitatively something quite different, and, although without them no perception of the object is possible, they do not by themselves convey a knowledge of the thing perceived.

  • It's a grand place, that, but not like this; quite different, and from it you have a sight of the finest spire in the world.

  • This is because that dream-world and the waking world present two disjointed landscapes, and the figures they contain belong to quite different genealogies--like the families of Zeus and of Abraham.

  • Then he said in a low voice, quite different to his own, "It's not sovereigns.

  • If you happen to drop it on purpose, it is quite different.

  • His armor and his weapons were all, I am almost sure, of quite different periods.

  • Now and then, however, one of the expressions used by Aunt Brita would recur to him with a suggestion of quite different possibilities.

  • Your father's position is quite different," his mother rejoined sharply.

  • All this is quite different in the case of the imagines, where we meet with very important differences in the conditions of life.

  • The caterpillars, however, show a quite different state of affairs.

  • The intestine is quite different in the two types of larvæ, the posterior opening being absent in the maggot-like grubs; at most only the tracheal and nervous systems show a certain agreement, but this is not complete.

  • Here also a very characteristic form of caterpillar indeed prevails, but it does not occur in all the genera, being replaced in some by a quite different form of larva.

  • The case would be quite different if, throughout a long period of time, in the one stage only typical and in the other only untypical parts were subjected to change.

  • It also agrees quite as accurately with the doctrines and ethical teachings of the sacred books of India, which in their turn are presented in quite different forms.

  • It has reached that stage at which profession and practice are always understood to be quite different things.

  • So on through the whole, the two disputants talking on quite different subjects.

  • Certainly one cannot but think that a different kind of early life would have given a quite different complexion to the literary individuality of George Sand.

  • They agree in the result, but the fundamental thought of the two is quite different.

  • However, all times and peoples and languages have distinguished the two, and held them to be quite different things; and so does every one even at the present day who knows nothing of the language of the new school, i.

  • After having weighed all these explanations, I suppose the foetus's quitting the matrix depends on a quite different cause.

  • The case under discussion is quite different.

  • The case of myself and the deadheads of other nights is quite different.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "quite different" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    analogous variation; commanding them; foreign money; healed them; mean what; nor even; quite ashamed; quite capable; quite clear; quite close; quite dead; quite different; quite easy; quite happy; quite independent; quite independently; quite otherwise; quite prepared; quite right; quite similar; quite smooth; quite sure; quite tender; quite true; quite useless; remained till