This source says "different to" is British.
Wow! Another one I had no idea about. I would have said "different to" is wrong!
Different from sounds right to my American ears.
I always say "different from".
A differs from B. A doesn't differ to B or differ than B.
But you'll hear all of those used with the adjective.
Yes, 'different' differs from 'differ'. But there's often a common usage of prepositions for the various parts of speech of a base word.Yeah, it is (always?) "differs from", but "different" is, well, different. The Elements of Style uses your argument Raymott, but you have to take what that book says with care.
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