distinct (exact matches only)
The first was by groups from the Mogollon area and Safford basin who produced distinctive ceramics now identified as "corrugated" pottery.
But the book shows up one vital distinction between their styles.
Labour stands for a system in which European policies on asylum and immigration, taxation and justice, defence and foreign affairs would slowly but surely replace distinctively British ones.
We are not blended together as one, so that our individual identities are lost; rather we are rooted in unity so that our distinctiveness in varied traditions and cultures can be celebrated and bring strength, not weakness, to and for the common good."
The Passion of the Christ (that lofty second "the" enforcing Jesus's role as the Messiah) is certainly a distinctively personal movie in a blandly secular Hollywood culture.
The Horse Heaven Hills is one of three areas of the state seeking federal recognition as a wine grape-growing region for its distinct climate and soil features.
Both proposed areas sit inside the already-recognized Columbia Valley appellation, which speaks to growers and winemakers drawing even further distinctions for their products.
"It really gives distinction to the winery."
The free software community was reading the tea leaves Friday, too, and there were some distinctly worrisome parts of the deal from that perspective.
You struggle sometimes to gild the lily, because there's the general impulse to do no harm, and you set aside distinctions between highbrow and lowbrow.
The story of "Moneyball" is how Billy Beane made the Oakland A's one of the most successful teams in baseball using a distinctive approach to judging talent.
In 1991, Mignola, who works out of his Battery Park studio these days, was a comic book artist drawing familiar heroes like Superman and Batman with a distinctive style -- his exaggerated human figures may not have fit the schematics of Gray's Anatomy, but their barrel torsos, tapered limbs and kinetic quality reminded many fans of Jack Kirby, the most influential comic book artist in the genre's history.
Next, the wretched but distinctly American syntax is clearly not the work of the Russian mafia, or whatever the current villain is called, or Brazilian criminals or overeducated and angrily underemployed Bulgarian geeks.
This distinction is crucial to understanding what many think is the September 11 commission's stated mandate:
More examples in news.google.com [distinct]