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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151. They were in effect an inferior kind of man, with no distinctive character of their own.
152. Taken together, they conveyed a view of primary teaching which had a distinctive character.
153. There were twenty days in the month, each being regarded as divine and of distinctive omen.
154. She raves over the low cholesterol content of kangaroo and it's distinctive, sweet taste.
155. A skyscraper would obviously be more distinctive than a low bulky design.
156. The most distinctive land-mark in the parish is the Rimswell water tower, built in 1916 to serve South Holderness with water.
157. This type of cougar has a distinctive crook in its tail.
158. Around airfields and other installations of national importance emplacements of the distinctive Soviet ZSU-23 multi-barrelled anti-aircraft guns could be seen.
159. Even in Britain people noticed dazzling,(sentencedict .com) lingering sunsets last winter which left a distinctive purple afterglow.
160. In language the basic units are distinctive sounds and words.
161. Another, contemporary series of Gosol paintings is characterized by a gentle, pastoral mood that is quite distinctive.
162. The cumulative effect of this conscientious blandness denied Lisa a distinctive personality, which limited the fervor of its users.
163. Sometimes manmade objects in high orbits about Earth are also seen and identified from their distinctive motion.
164. What mechanisms built the jaw's distinctive pattern, each tooth unique, the bone an asymmetric array of lumps and bumps?
165. What is distinctive is the idea that consciousness can be adequately described in terms of causal episodes.
166. The programs and data files have distinctive icons, providing a user-friendly graphical interface when run under OpenWindows.
167. However, financiers, merchants and bankers, such as the Rothschilds and the Barings, remained the most distinctive group.
168. A black widow spider has a distinctive red hourglass marking on its stomach.
169. Didymograptus species of this type have a distinctive shape like a tuning fork.
170. Each developed a distinctive dress style, distinctive argot and followed particular kinds of music.
171. Yet these ego-structures, although perhaps most distinctive of our species, did not appear whole, complete and without a past.
172. The most distinctive feature of the building is its enormous dome-shaped roof.
173. Ideally, of course, each type of music should he noted down according to a method that reflects its distinctive features.
174. His distinctive contribution was to apply the conventions of estate and garden plans to county maps.
175. Corn oil is slightly heavier and more distinctive in flavour - I find it too heavy for salads.
176. Bullock's report says companies that emerge from such university environments follow a distinctive pattern of development.
177. They are chiefly associated with his distinctive emphases on historical revelation and on the ethical rather than mystical nature of religion.
178. It is furnished in a distinctive baroque style and public rooms include several sitting rooms and a lobby-bar.
179. These sceptical, cautious and cloistered arrangements constitute the distinctive institutions of science which separate it from other more worldly activities.
180. At its most basic level, the railway station was the nineteenth century's distinctive contribution to architectural forms.
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.