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 distinct [dɪ'stɪŋkt]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 清楚的, 显著的, 不同的

  1. There is a distinct posibility that she'll be your teacher next term.
    她下学期当你们的老师的可能性非常大。
  2. Those two ideas are quite distinct from each other.
    这两种观点截然不同。
  3. The oice is not distinct.
    声音不清楚。


distinct
[ adj ]
  1. easy to perceive; especially clearly outlined

  2. <adj.all>
    a distinct flavor
    a distinct odor of turpentine
    a distinct outline
    the ship appeared as a distinct silhouette
    distinct fingerprints
  3. (often followed by `from') not alike; different in nature or quality

  4. <adj.all>
    plants of several distinct types
    the word `nationalism' is used in at least two distinct senses
    gold is distinct from iron
    a tree related to but quite distinct from the European beech
    management had interests quite distinct from those of their employees
  5. constituting a separate entity or part

  6. <adj.all>
    a government with three discrete divisions
    on two distinct occasions
  7. recognizable; marked

  8. <adj.all>
    noticed a distinct improvement
    at a distinct (or decided) disadvantage
  9. clearly or sharply defined to the mind

  10. <adj.all>
    clear-cut evidence of tampering
    Claudius was the first to invade Britain with distinct...intentions of conquest
    trenchant distinctions between right and wrong


Distinct \Dis*tinct"\, a. [L. distinctus, p. p. of distinguere:
cf. F. distinct. See {Distinguish}.]
1. Distinguished; having the difference marked; separated by
a visible sign; marked out; specified. [Obs.]

Wherever thus created -- for no place
Is yet distinct by name. --Milton.

2. Marked; variegated. [Obs.]

The which [place] was dight
With divers flowers distinct with rare delight.
--Spenser.

3. Separate in place; not conjunct; not united by growth or
otherwise; -- with from.

The intention was that the two armies which marched
out together should afterward be distinct.
--Clarendon.

4. Not identical; different; individual.

To offend, and judge, are distinct offices. --Shak.

5. So separated as not to be confounded with any other thing;
not liable to be misunderstood; not confused;
well-defined; clear; as, we have a distinct or indistinct
view of a prospect.

Relation more particular and distinct. --Milton.

Syn: Separate; unconnected; disjoined; different; clear;
plain; conspicuous; obvious.


Distinct \Dis*tinct"\, v. t.
To distinguish. [Obs.] --Rom. of R.

  1. Asked if he might bring the world leaders to Texas, possibly to San Antonio, the president remarked, "That's a distinct possibility.
  2. In the AIDS epidemic, PCR has a half dozen distinct uses, according to Gerald Schochetman of the CDC.
  3. But like other thrifts, it's expected to seek regulators' consent to create a distinct junk-bond entity.
  4. A windfall tax is a distinct possibility.
  5. The Morrison Formation, about 50 miles north of Denver, contains up to six distinct dinosaur fauna from successive time periods, Bakker said.
  6. Chevrolet officials counter that the Geo name will simply give the cars a needed distinct identity.
  7. Trauma units are usually affiliated with, but distinct from, ordinary emergency rooms.
  8. The study by Selnes and Dr. Justin McArthur, also of Hopkins, was intended to resolve questions raised by earlier studies that had found distinct mental problems, such as loss of memory and mental slowness, in people infected with the AIDS virus.
  9. I think there's a very distinct possibility that it will _ this term. You can count the votes," he said.
  10. Russia's reform overshadows all others, because of its size and its resources: here, there are distinct signs of faltering.
  11. He takes particular exception to the distinct society status the deal would grant Quebec, and the prospect of a Quebec veto over Senate reform.
  12. He contends that the Pebble Beach trademark protects only the company's distinct logo rendering of the tree with waves in the background, and that after 100 years of being freely snapped, the tree is now in the public domain.
  13. The evolution of computers will be faster than the evolution of animals." As computers evolve, the differences between electronic and flesh-and-blood brains will become less distinct, Minsky said. "Some day we'll have machines that think like humans.
  14. They assumed homogeneous but totally distinct mass markets, again with little overlap between them.
  15. Nearly half live in Turkey, which refuses even to recognize them as a distinct national minority and refers to them only as "mountain Turks."
  16. We have to see whether there is still the need for a distinct regulatory regime.' The future of the USM has been in doubt since the late 1980s with the end of the stock market boom.
  17. Since 1933, each person joining the National Guard simultaneously enlists in two distinct organizations _ the Army or Air National Guard of a particular state and the Army or Air National Guard of the United States.
  18. And as the Post Office's managing director, Mr Bill Cockburn, pointedly remarks, in every marginal constituency there is a marginal post office. But as Mr Cockburn also makes clear, there are distinct problems with the status quo.
  19. Dealers identified distinct signs of fear in the market. The setback among dollar stocks, as the US currency challenged its low against the yen, was increased by bearish reviews of the pharmaceutical stock sector by a large US securities house.
  20. This is clearly distinct from assigning French troops automatically to Nato.
  21. He insists that "social democracy" must remain a distinct alternative for voters.
  22. "We think the shuttle has such distinct regional brand preference, it makes sense to appeal to it."
  23. The "distinct society" plan proved unpopular with English-speaking Canadians.
  24. He says the south is 'a priority problem' and hopes it will not become a distinct world like Italy's Mezzogiorno. Government officials in Madrid say the north-south divide is less accentuated in Spain than in some other countries.
  25. There also has been growing realization that the Meech Lake Accord, a constitutional agreement recognizing Quebec as a "distinct society," may not make its deadline on June 23 for ratification by all 10 provinces.
  26. The author of the 12-year-old court opinion, Justice Harry A. Blackmun, has said he believes there is "a very distinct possibility" Roe vs. Wade will be reversed during the court's current term.
  27. Ms. Thernstrom says the Civil Rights Act of 1990 may "deliver a message that minority groups amount to separate nations and separate nations require distinct treatment."
  28. For this is no truncated version of the New York show: rather it is a substantial study, concentrated and distinct, of the young Matisse in his early maturity, as he moved from tentative experiment to magisterial authority.
  29. Moreover, those reversals appear to follow distinct seasonal patterns, usually taking place early in the year.
  30. As he was growing up with a father who fished the Mississippi River recreationally and commercially, young Greg often experienced the distinct fragrance of the catches.
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