Synonym: classifiable, typical. Similar words: distinction, distinct, distinguish, instinct, active, activist, assist in, existing. Meaning: [dɪ'stɪŋktɪv] adj. 1. of a feature that helps to distinguish a person or thing 2. capable of being classified.
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61. The station etiquette of the suburban commuter was quite distinctive.
62. That's about ten pounds for every one of the wrinkles that makes them so distinctive.
63. Individually, each was a stylist with a voice and approach so distinctive they could never be mistaken for anyone else.
64. The three islands have distinctive characteristics with the best of the game fishing being on South Uist.
65. Diving ducks, with distinctive narrow saw-edged bills, well adapted to chasing fish under water.
66. Besides such large and expensive works, Stanton produced a considerable number of relatively simple mural tablets, in a distinctive style.
67. They may also share distinctive ways of communicating, such as a repertoire of sayings and in- jokes.
68. Those in my tiresome generation who thought 25 years ago it was so very distinctive, so in, to swear.
69. So an illustration may offer far wider possibilities for the art director to achieve special effects and a distinctive style.
69. Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.
70. Loganberries display a purplish dark red colon Their flavor is slightly tart and very distinctive, which makes them useful for winemaking.
71. The manufacturer makes products to match the retailer's specifications and these are labelled with the retailer's own distinctive label.
72. There had to be lots of genuine nurses with that hair colouring, but Aileen's was certainly very noticeable and distinctive.
73. I argue along with T. J. Clark that Parisian modernism is most distinctive in terms of the disruptive force.
74. Yoshitaka introduced new elements to the art, until gradually the art lost some of its distinctive Okinawan features.
75. Education is seen as a process of nurturing individuality, of fostering distinctive qualities that already reside within each individual.
76. They have Kalashnikov rifles slung ready across their chests and wear distinctive red and white armbands and helmets.
77. All three are of type K. Ara has a fairly distinctive shape.
78. The results were wholly unexpected: Mercury has small, reflective polar caps with the distinctive depolarization behavior of ice.
79. They evolved rapidly and spread widely, and have a range of distinctive characters to help the investigator in his identifications.
80. Many pieces of both 14 and 17C metalwork display a distinctive spiky naturalism which is paralleled elsewhere in stone and wood.
81. Iodine is added as a final bacteria killer, giving the recycled water a distinctive aftertaste.
82. The distinctive nature of Ends is further reinforced by the subsequent actions of club officials and police.
83. The smell is distinctive, too: chemicals and rotten eggs, the hydrogen sulphides produced by processing coal.
84. But there does appear to be something distinctive about language.
85. As early as 1848-9 a new and distinctive type of station had appeared.
86. Thanks to some very skilful hanging each of the four rooms used has a very distinctive flavour all its own.
87. Religious Education stamps the Catholic school in every area of its educational task with its distinctive Catholic character.
88. The pottery designs are distinctive and a diverse range of colours used.
89. Her hair was twisted into tight steel-grey rolls on which sat her clinic cap with its distinctive badge.
90. All madeiras are blended and the blender is an artist, giving the blend its distinctive characteristics.
More similar words: distinction, distinct, distinguish, instinct, active, activist, assist in, existing, actively, consist in, detective, objective, collective, perspective, productive, attractive, protective, effectively, respectively, effectiveness, irrespective of, administrative, active transport, function, sanction, functional, and function, malfunction, disturb, distant.