What's the difference between bach and each?

Bach


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Andrew Bachelor AKA King Bach (@KingBach) Andrew Bachelor.
  • (2) Mother's guilt Fifty years on, the scars have not properly healed for Bach, now 68.
  • (3) The Kuwaiti admitted openly lobbying for Bach, a breach of IOC rules, but both downplayed his influence following Bach's victory.
  • (4) Yet one of his rivals for the presidency, the Swiss lawyer Denis Oswald, said he did not "share the same values" as Bach.
  • (5) Best rediscovery Jazz documentary A Great Day in Harlem (1994) by Jean Bach.
  • (6) Taken together with comments from International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach that suggested Russia could get its house in order in time for next summer’s Games, the country appeared increasingly likely to accept a short term ban in the belief it would be allowed to return before next August.
  • (7) His links with Bach have been the subject of much speculation among the German media, which has also honed in on Bach’s trade links to the middle east in his business life and his past as an executive for Adidas and Siemens.
  • (8) For each Prelude, the tonic (first note) and the mode (major or minor) of the scale produced were compared to the tonic and mode designated by Bach.
  • (9) Three productions that had been scheduled for later this season are being scrapped: Johann Christian Bach's Endimione, Bartok's Bluebeard's Castle and Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro.
  • (10) The levels of Facteur Thymique Sérique (FTS) were measured in 9 patients at diagnosis, according to the rosette inhibition assay of Dardenne & Bach (1975).
  • (11) We also know from our experience that the other part of the job, that means putting everything on the desk, can be a painful experience, but that it is absolutely necessary to do this, as we have seen from our own history.” Bach also pointed to the strict new bidding rules for candidate cities introduced in the wake of Salt Lake City, forbidding them from visiting voting members.
  • (12) There shouldn’t be any bouncing back and forth … but I have to respect the IOC’s decision.” Desperately trying to claw back some credibility on the issue, the IOC president, Thomas Bach, has said his organisation will re-examine the possibility of life bans for those caught doping.
  • (13) "It is very clear the Games cannot be used as a stage for political demonstrations, however good the cause may be," said Bach.
  • (14) The other path will safeguard both our reputation for fairness and moral authority when confronting human rights abuses abroad.” The new shadow attorney general, Lord Bach, also criticised Tory plans, saying: “The Human Rights Act 1998 was one of the most important pieces of legislation of the whole Labour government between 1997 and 2010.
  • (15) This is also a structural problem and will not be solved simply by the election of a new president,” Bach said.
  • (16) It is said that Bach’s lily-livered reluctance to push for a ban stems not only from his own close relationship with Vladimir Putin – those pictures of them clinking champagne glasses like newlyweds or whooping it up with other authoritarian leaders at opening ceremonies in Sochi and Baku threaten to define him – but from his own experiences as an athlete.
  • (17) The labeled polypeptide copurifies with the recently identified and isolated transporter [Stern-Bach, Y., Greenberg-Ofrath, N., Flechner, I., & Schuldiner, S. (1990) J. Biol.
  • (18) I've got Andras Schiff and Glenn Gould in the same playlist: why, of course, because both played all of Bach Preludes and Fugues, and the Goldberg Variations.
  • (19) Bach had previously spoken of assurances from Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, that gays would not be discriminated against in Sochi.
  • (20) Bach said it would apply a “zero tolerance policy not only with regard to individual athletes, but to all their entourage within its reach”.

Each


Definition:

  • (a. / a. pron.) Every one of the two or more individuals composing a number of objects, considered separately from the rest. It is used either with or without a following noun; as, each of you or each one of you.
  • (a. / a. pron.) Every; -- sometimes used interchangeably with every.

Example Sentences: