compare to/with, in comparasion with/to
Dear Teachers:
What's the difference in using "compare to/with, comparision with/to"?
An example from Cambridge Dictionaies is:
If you compare house prices in the two areas it's quite amazing how different they are.
May I say "I compared the house prices between east and west."?
Re: compare to/with, in comparasion with/to
Quote:
Originally Posted by wpqin
Dear Teachers:
What's the difference in using "compare to/with, comparision with/to"?
An example from Cambridge Dictionaies is:
If you compare house prices in the two areas it's quite amazing how different they are.
May I say "I compared the house prices between east and west."?
That sentence does not sound very typical of English. I would not use "between" in this case.
Here is how I would write your sentence:
I compared the house prices in the east to the house prices in the west.
Here is how I would write the sentence using "with":
I compared the house prices in the east with the house prices in the west.
I compared the house prices in the east and the west with each other.
The house prices in the east and the west are not comparable. - They are very different.