Synonym: celebrated, famous, great, important, noted, outstanding, popular, well-known. Similar words: distinguish, anguish, distinct, distinction, distinctive, existing, disguise, altruistic. Meaning: [dɪ'stɪŋgwɪʃt] adj. 1. (used of persons) standing above others in character or attainment or reputation 2. used of a person's appearance or behavior; befitting an eminent person 3. set apart from other such things.
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181) He was awarded a medal for distinguished service in the field.
182) Her former husband is Britain's most distinguished amateur huntsman and Master of the Duke of Beafort's foxhounds.
183) Indeed Karelius, in opera cloak and one of Aranyos' dandyish suits, flattered himself he looked as distinguished as any.
184) Alfred was an interesting, bright, complex, difficult man, also of a distinguished lineage.
185) He was a burly man of average height, white-haired and distinguished looking.
186) For example: Handwriting contains many similarly shaped characters which must be distinguished from each other to achieve effective recognition.
187) Your Royal Highnesses, Your Excellencies, distinguished cabinet ministers and ambassadors, ladies and gentlemen.
188) The result is a range of different genres of literary criticism and literary theory, to some extent distinguished by register.
189) It seems better not to include it as a criterion of value, once it is clearly distinguished from probability.
190) However, a concern to understand social policy may be distinguished from a preoccupation with the determinants of welfare.Sentencedict
191) Even without the asylum claims, the games were distinguished more by events off the track than on.
192) He is a most distinguished Mozartian, and this year is recording all 27 of the piano concertos for Chandos Records.
193) A good all rounder with a very distinguished looking bottle.
194) Bradley has distinguished himself as the top scorer on the team.
195) Somebody very distinguished had played the part in the last London production.
196) During the battle five Troll Slayers distinguished themselves by attacking and destroying three Trolls which were perilously close to crushing Duregar himself.
197) In face and figure young Pelops is clearly distinguished from the foursquare sturdy elder Oenomaus.
198) Three Levels on which rationality has practical significance may be distinguished, which I shall call groundedness, enlightenment and emancipation.
199) They were scarcely two hundred yards distant; yet such was the gloom that they could not be clearly distinguished.
200) Marx distinguished two classes, bourgeois and proletarian, based on the ownership of the means of production.
201) They must therefore be distinguished from on-exchange competitive trades for any publication or price reporting purposes.
202) Once we distinguished between party supporters and uncommitted voters we found no consistent differences between voters with different viewing habits.
203) The daughter of a distinguished Cambridge mathematics tutor, she began work as a Sunday school teacher in the 1850s.
204) Or even love, in so far as it is distinguished from sexuality.
205) There were four main characteristics which distinguished the early retired from other older people.
206) We jointly hosted an informal Sunday lunch for a distinguished group of actors on their day off.
207) Berchoux was a very well known satirist and his illustrators were distinguished men.
208) It's one of the most distinguished hotels in Italy, grand and imposing.
209) Tim distinguished himself for eleven years in Miami, including the history-making 1972 undefeated season that climaxed in the 1973 Super Bowl.
210) Microscopically it is most readily distinguished from the latter by having long narrow spicules.
More similar words: distinguish, anguish, distinct, distinction, distinctive, existing, disguise, altruistic, in the distance, assist in, consist in, testing, disturbing, interesting, astonished, relinquish, dish, relinquishment, ring up, bring up, spring up, distend, distant, disturb, burst in, instinct, distance, district, distract, distress.