different

See:
  • (as) different as chalk and cheese
  • (as) different as night and day
  • a (whole) new ballgame
  • a different ball of wax
  • a different kettle of fish
  • a different/new ball game
  • a totally different ballgame
  • a whole new ball game
  • as different as chalk and cheese
  • be a different kettle of fish
  • be another/a different matter
  • be different sides of the same coin
  • be in a different league
  • be on the same wavelength/on different wavelengths
  • change one's tune
  • dance to a different tune
  • dance to another tune
  • different as night and day
  • different sides of the same coin
  • different sides of the same shield
  • different strokes
  • different strokes (for different folks)
  • different strokes for different folks
  • different times, different manners
  • go a different way
  • go in a different direction
  • horse of a different color
  • horse of a different color, a
  • horse of another color
  • horse of another/different color, a
  • kettle of fish
  • know different
  • know different/otherwise
  • march to (the beat of) a different drum
  • march to (the beat of) a different drummer
  • march to (the beat of) a different drummer, to
  • march to (the beat of) a different tune
  • march to a different beat
  • march to a different drummer
  • march to a different drummer/drum
  • march to a different tune
  • modulate to (some other) key
  • no accounting for tastes, there is no
  • no accounting for tastes, there's
  • put a different complexion on (something)
  • put a new complexion on (something)
  • put a new/different complexion on something
  • same same, but different
  • same shit, different day
  • sing a different song
  • sing a different song/tune
  • sing a different tune
  • speak/talk the same/a different language
  • tell a different story
  • tell a different tale
  • tell a different, another, etc. tale/story
  • wear a different hat
  • wear another hat
  • whistle a different tune
References in classic literature
(1) All the appearances of different stars in a given place, or,
(2) All the appearances of a given star in different places.
Like the different appearances of the table to a number of simultaneous observers, the different particulars that belong to one physical object are to be collected together by continuity and inherent laws of correlation, not by their supposed causal connection with an unknown assumed existent called a piece of matter, which would be a mere unnecessary metaphysical thing in itself.
According to the view that I am suggesting, a physical object or piece of matter is the collection of all those correlated particulars which would be regarded by common sense as its effects or appearances in different places.
(2) According to the system of correlated particulars in different places to which they belong, such system being defined as a physical object.
Just as a photographic plate receives a different impression of a cluster of stars when a telescope is part of the intervening medium, so a brain receives a different impression when an eye and an optic nerve are part of the intervening medium.
One way collects together the appearances commonly regarded as a given object from different places; this is, broadly speaking, the way of physics, leading to the construction of physical objects as sets of such appearances.
The appearances of a piece of matter from different places change partly according to intrinsic laws (the laws of perspective, in the case of visual shape), partly according to the nature of the intervening medium--fog, blue spectacles, telescopes, microscopes, sense-organs, etc.
From this absolute zero of fertility, the pollen of different species of the same genus applied to the stigma of some one species, yields a perfect gradation in the number of seeds produced, up to nearly complete or even quite complete fertility; and, as we have seen, in certain abnormal cases, even to an excess of fertility, beyond that which the plant's own pollen will produce.
It can be shown that plants most widely different in habit and general appearance, and having strongly marked differences in every part of the flower, even in the pollen, in the fruit, and in the cotyledons, can be crossed.
For why should the sterility be so extremely different in degree, when various species are crossed, all of which we must suppose it would be equally important to keep from blending together?
Great diversity in the size of two plants, one being woody and the other herbaceous, one being evergreen and the other deciduous, and adaptation to widely different climates, does not always prevent the two grafting together.
Results of statistical data suggest that as per Table 1 Mann Whitney test the respondents received training organized by either University/Department or HEC have different opinion about personal development, training, transfer environment and organizational development, where as they have same opinion about instructional development, personal needs and personal.
"Clothing in Different Places" is filled with color photographs of many people from many places wearing typical or festive clothing representative of their area and culture.