Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
I believe we should make a distinction between these two things.
There is no reason to make a distinction between public and private life.
It is very important to make a distinction between the two.
Even among those eight men I must make a distinction.
Yet he said it was important to make a distinction between art and culture.
In fact, he did not make a distinction between the two kinds of love.
Very quickly, I will make a distinction between these two elements.
It's important to make a distinction when we talk about whether the tax system is fair.
To make a distinction twice has the same effect as making it once.
Some groups made a distinction between the two figures, while others considered them the same.
"But the technology is sensitive enough to make a distinction."
"You have to make a distinction between someone's desires and what they can actually do."
I do make a distinction between psychological and physical problems in some ways.
It has already been said: from now on, we will make a distinction between before and after the Martin report.
"We need to make a distinction between law and morality," she said.
For the viewer, the question became whether the industry was making a distinction without a difference.
There was no need to make a distinction until now."
This was in the context of making a distinction between a man and his religious office.
The problem, I think, is failing to make a distinction between thinking and language.
Is it possible that students used to make a distinction between campus life and the real world?
But we need to make a distinction between the different situations of many African countries.
Maybe some of his disciples, or others in the field, did, but I think you've got to make a distinction.
Thus, when a person makes a distinction, for example, there must be an identity and other value in the mind.
However, some make a distinction, so the terms can be a source of confusion.