We found 65 examples of how to use distinct in an English sentence.
Sentences 1 to 25 of 65.
# | Sentence | |
---|---|---|
1. | Your way of thinking is quite distinct from mine. | |
2. | Mice are distinct from rats. | |
3. | It's quite distinct from the smell of burning. | |
4. | Those two ideas are quite distinct. | |
5. | The sound was distinct from here. | |
6. | Cancer is not one but more than a hundred distinct diseases. | |
7. | A dog is distinct from a cat in physical characteristics. | |
8. | We are distinct from each other in taste. | |
9. | Horses are distinct from donkeys. | |
10. | He has no distinct idea of how to proceed. | |
11. | She has a distinct English accent. | |
12. | Lenses with two distinct optical powers are also called "bifocals". | |
13. | Thus the term has two distinct usages. | |
14. | Cancer is not one but more than one hundred distinct diseases. | |
15. | Proponents of a newer study classify the golden-bellied mangabey as a distinct subspecies. | |
16. | Imogen of the Internet has created a seminal classification of thirty distinct varieties of chatspeak, some now facing linguistic extinction. | |
17. | A distinct idea is defined as one which contains nothing which is not clear. | |
18. | I get the distinct impression that somebody doesn't want Tom to leave. | |
19. | Semantic equivalence is protean as well as fuzzy: what hoi polloi find equivalent may to cognoscenti be quite distinct. | |
20. | That's a distinct possibility. | |
21. | There's a distinct difference between them. | |
22. | Mary had noted a distinct change in Tom's behavior and work habits. | |
23. | There are two distinct parts. | |
24. | Does Iceland still need a distinct language from the one it officially sings ? | |
25. | Tom has a distinct French accent. |