Distinct in a sentence as an adjective

And that's where I think Stripe's policy has a distinct advantage.

For example, to ask about, to ask of, to ask to, and to ask in are very quite distinct.

I'll admit to a distinct feeling, that I've started to lose touch with pop technology.

I would guess they are actually two distinct but similar designs, and not two copies of the same design.

There was just the same distinct sensation where nobody has any idea what I feel like, even this guy who just lost his wife.

From this I get the distinct impression he really believed Microsoft wasn't doing anything wrong and things like bundling a browser with the OS were just "innovations";2. Microsoft became too hierarchical combined with more B and C managers.

"thing I use to send email" and "thing I use to watch music videos" are not conceptually distinct?Most users would send as emails to others the kinds of things they leave as comments on youtube?

With geographically distinct, independent, self monitoring servers, you will basically have no downtime.

* You want to keep in mind that breaks in cryptosystems represent new knowledge, and that the enterprise of breaking cryptosystems is an issue distinct from the public policy concern of where NSA is allowed to deploy those breaks.

It is that program construction is \nnot always a simple progression in which each act of assembly represents a distinct forward step and that the \nfinal product can be described simply as the sum of many sub-assemblies.

There's certainly nothing rude about pointing out a relevant and possibly non-obvious truth: military life is so distinct from civilian life that it may result in drastically different perspectives about what it means to be free.

Distinct definitions

adjective

(often followed by `from') not alike; different in nature or quality; "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"

See also: distinguishable

adjective

easy to perceive; especially clearly outlined; "a distinct flavor"; "a distinct odor of turpentine"; "a distinct outline"; "the ship appeared as a distinct silhouette"; "distinct fingerprints"

adjective

constituting a separate entity or part; "a government with three discrete divisions"; "on two distinct occasions"

See also: discrete

adjective

recognizable; marked; "noticed a distinct improvement"; "at a distinct (or decided) disadvantage"

See also: decided

adjective

clearly or sharply defined to the mind; "clear-cut evidence of tampering"; "Claudius was the first to invade Britain with distinct...intentions of conquest"; "trenchant distinctions between right and wrong"

See also: clear-cut trenchant