Synonym: clearly. Similar words: indistinctly, distinct, indistinct, distinctive, distinction, distinctively, distinctiveness, succinctly. Meaning: [dɪ'stɪŋktlɪ] adv. 1. clear to the mind; with distinct mental discernment 2. in a distinct and distinguishable manner 3. to a distinct degree.
Random good picture Not show
121. To Letterman, who was once a fan of Marcuse, it is a distinctly toothsome word.
122. Not only was it gaudy in appearance but the smell wafting from the kitchen was distinctly malodorous.
123. He was, and is, a distinctly affable chap, whereas I came across as cold, prickly and generally difficult.
124. Mammalian membranes have an enormously diverse composition and may contain over 100 distinctly different lipids.
125. She peered at the Christmas cactus she had bought for Alan and decided it looked distinctly sorry for itself.
126. Indeed, it is highly unlikely that White would capture on b7 in this line, 17 0-0 looking distinctly superior.
127. He could distinctly hear voices which seemed to be coming from the parcels office next door.
128. She had a distinctly uncomfortable feeling that he was not referring to the fight which had followed that little incident.
129. The environment for Windows add-on vendors is becoming distinctly unhealthy he says, as Microsoft adds functions into the base operating system.
130. The Church drew ever closer to the State but became a distinctly junior partner.
131. Amongst other things, it records a kinship system which struck Morgan as distinctly odd.
132. Here the double emphasis upon the need to arrest cultural degeneration and preserve the national heritage was distinctly in evidence.
133. Their financial status seems to have varied at different times in her life from the reasonably comfortable to the distinctly shabby genteel.
134. It is only in the very last paragraph that there is a distinctly evangelical position in the Party's platform.
135. In normal circumstances the suggestion that a contracting party can rely on his own breach to establish consideration is distinctly unattractive.
136. With Diana in the snow,[sentencedict.com] Charles looked distinctly unamused and drew the session to a close.
137. George Birkitt was looking distinctly peeved, aware that Michael Banks had upstaged him in a way that was quite unanswerable.
138. Even his hair was distinctly ruffled, as though impatient fingers had been frequently run through it.
139. When we talk we produce sounds of three distinctly different types.
140. The arms are distinctly noded, the ridges carrying the arm spines being particularly prominent.
141. The charms of limitless glasnost have already worn distinctly thin.
142. The outcome is that Scotch Whisky has been left to compete on distinctly unfavourable terms with imported wines.
143. Viewing the pilot episode Newman and Wilson were distinctly unhappy.
144. They are likely to be distinctly unimpressed by the policy implications of the taxonomic exercise undertaken by Coen and Hickman.
145. Indeed, a skirt cut across straight at the lower edge would have a distinctly odd look, rather like a box.
146. I distinctly remember assembling on a tray some orange-topped mushrooms, a rusty bed-spring, and some blackened pieces of toast.
147. Postnikova also manages to present in its possible light Tchaikovsky's Sonata, which is distinctly heavy going.
148. Just as the current crisis has a distinctly familiar ring to it, so too do the solutions being offered.
148. Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
149. I remember very distinctly the morning when my father came to tell us we had a new baby sister.
150. As he turned on the attic lights and climbed the creaking steps, he smelled it more distinctly than before.
More similar words: indistinctly, distinct, indistinct, distinctive, distinction, distinctively, distinctiveness, succinctly, distinguish, distinguished, undistinguished, distinguishable, indistinguishable, undistinguishable, distinguishing, instinct, instinctive, instinctively, statistical distribution, distill, sadistic, existing, assist in, pristine, twisting, persist in, consist in, resisting, persisting, disgusting.