Synonym: define, detect, dignify, honor, see. Similar words: anguish, distinct, distinction, distinctive, existing, assist in, consist in, testing. Meaning: [dɪ'stɪŋgwɪʃ] v. 1. mark as different 2. detect with the senses 3. be a distinctive feature, attribute, or trait; sometimes in a very positive sense 4. make conspicuous or noteworthy 5. identify as in botany or biology, for example.
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61 This will help distinguish your message from others, and in the process will interest the reader.
62 That is, the reformulation draws the hearer's attention to the range of contextual assumptions which distinguish sprinting from ordinary running.
63 Repetitions, as in a child practicing handwriting, are what distinguish procedural memories from episodic ones.
64 The works of Scaevola apart[Sentencedict.com ], classical law seems to have continued to distinguish between legacy and trust.
65 At the moment, the law does not distinguish between different classes of director.
66 We can not, for instance, distinguish clearly between Na-O and Si-0 pairs, or Na-O and Ca-O pairs.
67 At this age, children are still unable to distinguish between animate and inanimate objects.
68 Look, we were just kids, who like all kids want to distinguish ourselves from our parents.
69 And one of the distinctive features of life here has been a gradual loss of the ability to distinguish right from wrong.
70 Merchant's companies do not seem to distinguish between key result areas and critical success factors.
71 Young children often can't distinguish between TV programs and commercials.
72 His method is to distinguish philosophy, which he equates with experience, from the various modes of experience.
73 The brook was swollen and Hazel's ears could distinguish the deeper, smoother sound, changed since the day before.
74 Use the check card to help you distinguish between pattern and background rows.
75 He must not only distinguish behaviour from ideology, he must also take careful note of just how they are interrelated.
76 Treating this tragedy as a law and order matter misses the point, because it fails to distinguish between symptom and cause.
77 We can distinguish between using an expression and attending to an expression.
78 Major advances in overcoming this difficulty have been made by using antibodies to distinguish between cells that seem very similar.
79 In principle, correspondence- and interpretation-computations together can distinguish between the three types of perception in question.
80 They have to be able to distinguish between the empirical and deductive modes.
81 The problem of tracing the invention of enamel is made more difficult by failing to distinguish it more certainly from glass.
82 Moral ambivalence is probably associated with a number of other features which distinguish regulatory misconduct from breaches of the traditional code.
83 What we must do is to distinguish between bogus and genuine refugees.
84 However, the grammar must be able to correctly distinguish word hypotheses or the number of paths will grow exponentially.
85 It is important to distinguish such erosional features from true tectonic scarps since only the latter indicate recent or current fault activity.
86 We can distinguish between two kinds of rationale or emphasis in general degree courses: the general and the generic.
87 He also suggested a method to distinguish to which category any given behaviour pattern belonged; this was the isolation experiment.
88 Yes-but we need to distinguish between these different audiences when presenting research results.
89 You can distinguish this leaf-roller from the sawfly by the extent and nature of the curling.
90 A tiny baby soon learns to distinguish its mother's face from other adults' faces.
More similar words: anguish, distinct, distinction, distinctive, existing, assist in, consist in, testing, disturbing, dish, ring up, bring up, spring up, disturb, distant, burst in, instinct, distance, distress, district, distract, distribute, fishing, burst into, artistic, abstinence, clandestine, distribution, by this time, realistic.