How would you equate that?
. — and appeared to equate both sides.
This is because relevant experience doesn't always equate to good experience.
That should easily equate to days of shooting before the battery needs to be recharged.
Many people automatically equate being overweight with poor health, but this isn’t always the case.
Speech does not equate to language and language itself is very hard to detect from the genetic evidence.
Burn-out, anxiety and other mental health issues equate to one in three sick days for NHS staff in most months.
Mr Morar's difficulties are a symptom of something else: a culture in which corruption does not equate with disgrace.
If admitted, your certificate will sometimes transfer and equate to a certain number of classes or credits in the program.
If admitted, your certificate will sometimes transfer and equate to a certain number of classes or credits in the program.
The amounts equate to about a fifth of the median weekly wage in Greater Manchester, where part of the trial is being held.
They tended to equate looser gaits with extroversion and adventurousness, while seeing the more clipped walkers as more neurotic.
Backing commitment and setting a goal of reducing instability does not equate to criticising or stigmatising lone parents or those involved.
The Tesla CEO, Elon Musk, doesn’t seem inclined to let coronavirus interfere with his one-tech-tycoon crusade to make us equate “billionaire” with “billions of stupid”.
People who struggle to use this technology or access needed services may unfairly equate their experience of online learning under emergency circumstances with online learning quality in general.
In China, the state-run Global Times, a mouthpiece for the Chinese communist party, sought to equate Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protesters with those in the US seeking to subvert the democratic process, ignoring their diametrically opposed motivations.
Furthermore, to equate the effect of the Catholic church in a country such as Poland, where more than 90% of the population is Catholic, with its potential effect in China, where Catholics make up less than 1% of the population, is a bit of a stretch.
But at the conclusion of the hearing on Tuesday, Judge Thomas Ellis said: "While it is commendable that defendant Anne Sacoolas admits that she was negligent and that her negligence caused Harry Dunn's death, this does not equate acceptance of responsibility.
Stan Wischnowski, the top editor of the Philadelphia Inquirer, resigned Saturday after the newspaper faced a backlash from the public and its own staff about a headline that seemed to equate damage to buildings with the death of black Americans at the hands of police.
One of her big concerns is that Republicans, including Trump, have been trying to paint Biden as a socialist, which has negative connotations among the regions many Cuban and South American transplants, who equate the term with Fidel Castro and Nicolas Maduro dictatorships.
equate
verb cognition
- consider or describe as similar, equal, or analogous
verb stative
- be equivalent or parallel, in mathematics
verb change
- make equal, uniform, corresponding, or matching
Verb Forms
On this page, there are 20 sentence examples for equate. They are all from high-quality sources and constantly processed by lengusa's machine learning routines.
Grid-Flow technology
Just use the " " button to fragment sentence examples and start your learning flow.
Example output from one of your searches: