Sentence examples for perceptible differences from inspiring English sources

The phrase "perceptible differences" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to describe something that is slightly noticeable, but not overly obvious. For example, "There are some perceptible differences between these two books, even though they have the same cover."

Exact(11)

Most of the themes discussed in the Treatise of man and in the correspondence of 1640 (quoted above) reappear in the Passions of the soul, as this summary indicates: "the small gland which is the principal seat of the soul is suspended within the cavities containing these spirits, so that it can be moved by them in as many different ways as there are perceptible differences in the objects.

There is probably no single factor by which the errors can be explained, but the tendency for distinctly perceptible differences to appear larger than those more vaguely perceived is important.

Those barely perceptible differences in plain black hats are important markers, according to Ester Muchawsky-Schnapper, the curator of a popular exhibit that is drawing 800 people a day at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem on the lives and customs of Hasidic Jews, including the Satmar sect and their hats.

Both IL-2 and IL-7 increased pSTAT5 (all p < 0.001) without perceptible differences between the three genotypes (Fig. 3b).

Things of this latter sort are the so-called 'accidents.' Muslim theologians had argued for the existence of accidents from the fact that atoms as such are similar or homogeneous, and so if there are perceptible differences among bodies (and there clearly are such differences), those differences must be due to differences among the accidents that inhere in the atoms.

This methodology can be based on simple approaches such as measuring and comparing individually pixel values as well as something more complex as, for example, simulating the HVS and identifying the differences between the original content and the produced content based on visual perceptible differences.

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Similar(49)

And it is also an area in which the pressure of the "ordinary" consumer can make a perceptible difference.

That was the most instantly perceptible difference, if you were seeing Raúl's Cuba for the first time.

It aerates the water supply, so, crucially, there is no, or little, perceptible difference from the restricted flow for anyone using it.

There's little proper instruction, you often inadvertently complete future missions while wandering about and it features a levelling up process that makes no perceptible difference.

Around 7.5 million commuters cram themselves into local trains every day and the fledgling metro and monorail are unlikely to make a perceptible difference in the near future.

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