The idiom is not only used in English. In
European French the idiom is (to compare apples and pears) or (to compare cabbages and carrots). The former is the same as the German In
Latin American Spanish, it is (to compare potatoes and sweet potatoes) or, for all
varieties of Spanish, (to compare pears and apples) or (to add pears and apples). In
Peninsular Spanish,
juntar churras con merinas (mix Churras with Merinos, two breeds of sheep) and
confundir el tocino con la velocidad (confuse bacon and speed). Italian () and Romanian () also compare pears and apples. In Portuguese, a common formal expression is (to mix garlic with oak galls). However, a ubiquitous and much more popular colloquialism used to point out a total lack of logic is (literally, "what does the ass have to do with the trousers?"). In
Serbian, it is '''' () (to compare grandmothers and toads). In
Romanian, it is (the grandmother and the machine gun) and (the cow and the longjohns). Some languages compare dissimilar properties of dissimilar items. In
Danish, (Which is highest, the Round Tower or a thunderclap?), referring to the size of the former and the sound of the latter. In
Russian, '''' () (to compare warm and soft) is used. In
Argentina, a common question is (What does love and the eye of an axe have in common?). In
Colombia, (to confuse shit with ointment) is used. In
Polish, a similar idiomatic question is (What does the gingerbread have to do with the windmill?). In
Chinese, a similar phrase is used: () (horses and cattle won't mate with each other). A humorous variant is to replace "oranges" with something utterly dissimilar to apples; most famously, Jack Horner said that comparing science and religion is like comparing "apples and sewing machines." The idea is that although dissimilar, apples and oranges are at least fruits and at least share rudimentary similarities, whereas comparing them to something entirely different, such as pine cones or light bulbs, highlights how patently absurd making a comparison between the two is. This may be extended even further, comparing the fruit to non-physical concepts, such as "apples and
jury nullification". A particular related idiom found in accounting and economics is that of the "apples to apples comparison"; such comparisons are meant to filter out such complicating factors as accounting standards, size and scale and time periods. For example,
same-store sales is widely used as measurement because it allows a direct comparison of how the business is doing ignoring growth, which can be a significant complicating factor. ==Published comparisons==