quadraginta
Becoming Beth
Mmm ... I think you'll find that it's "from", "different from". Interesting departure, given this, don't you think:
Trusting you're duly enlightened, but feel free to conduct your own research.
Okay.
Different from, Different to, Different than
by Maeve Maddox
We all have our pet grammar peeves, usages that, when we hear them, affect us like the sound of a fingernail against a chalkboard.
I’ll bet I’m not the only one who shudders to hear sentences like these:
A boxer is different than a Doberman.
This car is different to that one.
Yet, are these usages really incorrect?
According to the entry for different from, different to, different than at Bartleby.com,These three have been usage items for many years. All are Standard and have long been so (different to is limited to British English, however), but only different from seems never to meet objections.
Hope that helps.
But to answer your question, it depends on exactly what our respective rankings are. I have no doubt that if he's honest our respective rankings, even if different (highly likely), will nonetheless lead to the same conclusion as to which actor has the most acting merit, generally.
I thought you were going to answer the question. That isn't an answer, it's an evasion. A clumsy one.
