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.
Random good picture Not show
181. Together these principles attempt to establish what is distinctive about the Modular Course.
182. In carving out a distinctive niche for themselves, a number of options have been open to them.
183. The consequent leverage is the most distinctive feature of our financial era.
184. Over the winter the distinctive bare earth is ground up and massed into sharp ruts by tractor tyres.
185. Immatures best told from other large immature gulls by distinctive shape of bill, heavy and appearing to droop at tip.
186. But the unit will retain a distinctive identity by having tan berets.
187. It is concerned with understanding the world and has a set of distinctive methodological devices for engaging in that process.
188. There is a growing band of buyers who want something more distinctive and who are prepared to pay extra for it.
189. This novel and distinctive economic backcloth to the inter-war years had a number of important consequences for town planning.
189. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find nice sentences for a large number of words.
190. Anjou wines are so distinctive, that in 1920 a competition was held to design a glass to do them justice.
191. Do you understand the distinctive calling of a sister, brother, religious priest?
192. There ought to be something very distinctive about the theory that describes the universe.
193. In other words, does the expansion of highly distinctive words result in a greater proportion of useful information?
194. Pretty Samantha Mumba sounded like she has a distinctive voice.
195. The group shares a distinctive way of life, knowledge, beliefs, codes, tastes and prejudices.
196. The firm's wines, mostly bearing its own distinctive labels, include a magnificent collection of ready-to-drink burgundy.
197. The calcareous skeletons of this distinctive species have weathered out from the limestone matrix.
198. One particular strain lives only in the San Francisco Bay Area and gives the sourdough bread from that region its distinctive taste.
199. Shrewd in business, he had a ready wit and a distinctive appearance, with a full beard and piercing eyes.
200. This distinctive corporate culture flourishes in an environment in which independence is more a matter of convention than anything else.
201. It has evolved over the years from a nouveau style to a more weighty red wine with distinctive black raspberry fruit.
202. He created very distinctive passages of ascending chords to accompany the magic bird's flight through the trees.
203. Even to celebrate what is distinctive about women does not, in my opinion, automatically qualify as feminist.
204. Its runways made a distinctive pattern, a slanting cross, as if some one had slammed a rubber stamp on the scruffy countryside.
205. The Provencale beef daube and the zucchini casserole, for instance, were decent but not distinctive.
206. This will all add to the atmosphere and enable the creation of a distinctive meal experience.
207. These nobles wear exotically decorated armour and carry tall lances, and they have distinctive back banners adorned with feathers.
208. Urban growth is often reflected morphologically by the appearance of a distinctive central area.
209. Drifting out of an open window, riding over a choppy bassline, comes the distinctive voice of Omar.
210. The distinctive nature of this pattern was best illustrated in the coaches to away matches.
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.