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The phrase "a distinct degree" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to emphasize a difference in quality or intensity between two things. For example, "The severity of the crime earned him a distinct degree of punishment than the others."
Exact(4)
It's a year I've known a distinct degree of heartbreak and devastation, and paramount in that journey has been the unique turmoil of ending friendships.
Using genome-wide data, we demonstrate that histone acetylation and histone methylation show a distinct degree of autonomy with respect to promoter methylation.
Our design consisted of a three-state movement landscape, where each state represented a subcellular space, and imposed a distinct degree of freedom in movement on its resident molecules.
We sought to determine whether the use of the baseline PaO2/FiO2 for stratifying patients at ARDS onset results in the identification of subgroups of patients with a distinct degree of lung injury.
Similar(56)
However, a copolymerization study of acrylamide (AM) with the sodium salt of 2-acrylamide-2-methyl propane-sulfonate (AMPS) having a distinct sulfonation degree depicts that AM/AMPS maintains the viscosity of the polymer solution better than HPAM under high salinity conditions in the presence of calcium ions (Levitt and Pope 2008).
The Energy Resources Engineering department offers two distinct degree programs at both the M.S and Ph.D. levels.
The procedure involves evaluating the PLS models generated with two sets of calibration tablets incorporated with distinct degree of concentration correlation between the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) and excipients.
The certain gene in different cancer cell lines was with distinct degree of methylation.
We may call this approach the resemblance theory of understanding: mental acts are classified according to the distinct degree and kind of resemblance they have to the things that are understood.
The differences in coccolith mass are attributed here as the relative abundance of the two E. huxleyi morphotypes that present distinct degree of calcification and that are both abundant in this area: Winter (1985) described in the CCS a heavy form of E. huxleyi referred as «warm» and a light one referred as «cold».
However, each venom showed distinct degree of protein composition complexity.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com