1. distinguish
e. g distinguish yourself
It seems that it's impossible to distinguish an obsessional neurosis from an intense love from a biochemical perspective.
Could you teach me how people distinguish between these words in common usage?
No matter how we try, it is impossible to distinguish good people from bad people by outward appearances.
We need to distinguish what a sentence could mean from what it actually does mean when used by one particular speaker on one particular occasion.
These days when I hear about these horrible incidents on the news I get the feeling that more and more young people are losing their ability to distinguish between real and virtual worlds.
You get to see the wood only when it becomes too difficult to distinguish individual trees.
The problem quoted isn't one, but there are problems in the reading section that ask you to distinguish relative pronouns from relative adverbs.
What is produced by our industry needs to distinguish itself by innovation and quality, never by price.
There is very little to distinguish it from the hundreds of other websites devoted to this subject.
Those bands distinguished themselves during the revolution in the sixties.
In Spock we can distinguish three classes that are able to override a behaviour of some other class or interface: Stubs, Mocks and Spies
Combination of classical music, improvisation and blues distinguish Deep Purple from the other bands. Their last concert delighted fans
Religion, which should most distinguish us from the beasts, and ought most particularly elevate us, as rational creatures, above brutes, is that wherein men often appear most irrational, and more senseless than beasts.
英語 "という言葉rozróżniać odróżniać"(distinguish)集合で発生します。
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