Show me
of
Words that sound like "distinct" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Different from one another (with the preferable adposition being "from").
Relevance: 0%
Fashionably distinguished or elegant; having an air of superiority.
Far off (physically, logically or mentally).
distended
Separate; discontinuous; not connected.
(n)
An administrative division of an area.
(v)
(transitive) To divert the attention of.
(intransitive) To self-destruct.
Distinguishing, used to or enabling the distinguishing of some thing.
(adv)
In a distinct manner.
(of an image etc) not clearly defined or not having a sharp outline; faint or dim
(archaic) distinctness
To set a destination for (something), to send (something) to a particular destination.
A natural or inherent impulse or behaviour.
The liquid that has been condensed from vapour during distillation; normally a purified form or a fraction of an original liquid.
Confined to a predetermined fate or destiny; certain.
To discover or find by careful search, examination, or probing.
The act of removing dust from the furniture, as a household chore.
(intransitive) To extend or expand, as from internal pressure; to swell
(transitive) Often followed by from: to set (someone or something) at a distance (noun noun, sense 1.1) from someone or something else.
Having been produced by means of distillation.
(rare) Stained, discoloured, tarnished.
An instance of descending; act of coming down.
A male given name from the Germanic languages (very rarely also given to women).
(transitive) To analyze an idea in detail by separating it into its parts.
(intransitive) To disagree; to withhold assent. Construed with from (or, formerly, to).
A city in Florida.
(transitive) To remove dust from.
No longer in use or active, nor expected to be again.
To take one thing from another; remove from; make smaller or less by some amount.
A microscopically small mite, of the Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus, or Dermatophagoides farinae species.
(anatomy) Toward a distal part; on the distal side of; distally.
(music, intransitive) To be dissonant.
(archaic) To hold in contempt, to despise, to look down on, to scorn.
US standard spelling of distil. [(transitive) To exude (a liquid) in small drops; also, to give off (a vapour) which condenses in small drops.]
The act of conducting a test; trialing, proving.
Deeply hurt, saddened, or worried; incapacitated by distress.
(slang) Synonym of diss (“an insult or put-down”).
(transitive) To give a false or misleading account of; pervert.
A feeling of dislike, aversion or antipathy.
(rare) To stain, discolour or tarnish
regarded with aversion
(transitive) To take credit or reputation from; to derogate; to defame or decry.
(transitive) To regard (someone or something) with strong contempt.
(object-oriented programming) A function that runs when an object is no longer required, used to release any resources that it was using.
(slang) A song, especially a hip hop or rap recording, intended to disparage or attack another person or group.
(Norse mythology) Any of a group of minor female deities in Scandinavian folklore.
Alternative spelling of distracter. [That which distracts, or serves as a distraction.]
(transitive) To remove a chemical stain from.
(transitive) To separate, sever, or split.
absent-minded, troubled, distracted
That which distracts, or serves as a distraction.
The property or degree of being distinct.
(prosody) A couplet, a two-line stanza making complete sense.
(tennis) To play a soft drop shot.
A thin, flat, circular plate or similar object.
(law) The legal right of a landlord to seize the property of a tenant in the event of nonpayment of rent.
Of or relating to deism.
(transitive, obsolete) To divide or split (something).
(transitive) to remove ticks (parasitic arachnids) from
(agriculture) To harrow.
(transitive) To put (something) out of tune.
(psychology) Relating to dystonia.