to be distinct from something
1as distinct from — phrase used for showing that you want to consider something separately from something else The company, as distinct from its shareholders, should be liable for any debts. Thesaurus: separate and not relatedsynonym Main entry: distinct …
2as distinct from — used for showing that you want to consider something separately from something else The company, as distinct from its shareholders, should be liable for any debts …
3mark something off from something — ˌmark sb/sth ˈoff (from sb/sth) derived to make sb/sth seem different from other people or things • Each of London s districts had a distinct character that marked it off from its neighbours. Main entry: ↑markderived …
4mark somebody off from something — ˌmark sb/sth ˈoff (from sb/sth) derived to make sb/sth seem different from other people or things • Each of London s districts had a distinct character that marked it off from its neighbours. Main entry: ↑markderived …
5distinct — [[t]dɪstɪ̱ŋkt[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED: oft ADJ from n If something is distinct from something else of the same type, it is different or separate from it. Engineering and technology are disciplines distinct from one another and from science... This… …
6From the beginnings to Avicenna — Jean Jolivet INTRODUCTION Arabic philosophy began at the turn of the second and third centuries of the Hegira, roughly the ninth and tenth centuries AD. The place and the time are important. It was in 133/750 that the ‘Abbāssid dynasty came to… …
7distinct - distinctive - distinguished — ◊ distinct If one thing is distinct from another, there is an important difference between them. Our interests were quite distinct from those of the workers. ...a tree related to but quite distinct from the European beech. You describe something… …
8distinct — I (clear) adjective apparent, clarus, clear cut, clear to the mind, clear to the senses, clearly defined, concrete, conspicuous, crystal clear, definite, distinctus, distinguishable, easily perceived, easily understood, eidetic, evident, explicit …
9distinct — dis|tinct W3 [dıˈstıŋkt] adj [Date: 1300 1400; : Latin; Origin: distinctus, past participle of distinguere; DISTINGUISH] 1.) clearly different or belonging to a different type ▪ two entirely distinct languages distinct types/groups/categories etc …
10distinct — dis|tinct [ dı stıŋkt ] adjective ** 1. ) separate and different in a way that is clear: They were classified into two distinct groups. distinct from: The region s linguistic and cultural identity is quite distinct from that of the rest of the… …