make a discrimination
Frequency: 5.55.0 per million words
To distinguish or see a difference between things.
Categories:
Examples (10)
- Young children find it difficult to make fine discriminations.
- An art critic must be able to make a fine discrimination between an original and a forgery.
- A skilled sommelier can make subtle discriminations between wines from the same region.
- The philosopher's work teaches us how to make a clear discrimination between fact and opinion.
- In language learning, it's essential to make a discrimination between similar-sounding vowels.
- He made a crucial discrimination in the data that led to a scientific breakthrough.
- The law makes a discrimination between different types of offenses, with varying penalties.
- It is important for a moral agent to make a discrimination between right and wrong.
- With experience, you'll learn to make a discrimination between a genuine offer and a scam.
- The machine learning model is being trained to make a discrimination between healthy and diseased cells.