Suki, your preferences make no difference to how I feel toward you.
But of course, as she tells Nerissa, her own preferences make no difference.
Your own preferences will also make a difference to how aggressively you play, and what tactics you use.
His preference, he said, would be "the most qualified person, with the aim being whatever makes the Board work best."
In this instance, his preference for optionality made the difference.
His preference makes sense as drug policy and addresses Peru's economic plight.
In this sense, preferences make scapegoats of the very people they seek to help.
Although the preference had already made its way into the American vernacular, usage on the series may have accelerated the change.
That preference does not make baseball players any different from any other group of employees.
But we refuse to let the preferences of another state's agency make us even consider leaving Long Island.