equating in English

verb
1
consider (one thing) to be the same as or equivalent to another.
customers equate their name with quality

Use "equating" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "equating" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "equating", or refer to the context using the word "equating" in the English Dictionary.

1. Synonyms for Allegorizing include assimilating, analogizing, comparing, equating, likening, associating, bracketing, classing, grouping and matching

2. Synonyms for metAphorizing include analogizing, comparing, equating, likening, bracketing, assimilating, relating, matching, paralleling and parallelling

3. The minimum efficient scale can be computed by equating average cost (AC) with marginal cost (MC).

4. The criminals responsible delude themselves by equating their best interests with those of soceity in general.

5. For some terms, I have made a closest-approximation categorisation -- for example equating "lead developer" with "maintainer."

6. They distort his speeches and offer simplistic interpretations of his equating the HIV virus with poverty and inequality.

7. Equating marginal cost and marginal revenue, each firm will produce an output at which price exceeds marginal cost.

8. Roughly the same definitions of Antedate and the explicit equating of predate with, simply, "Antedate" go back to the Fifth Collegiate (1936)

9. But Chief Executive Mark Parker did talk of a "swoosh recovery," equating gradual improvement in the world economy with the upward curve of the company's logo.

10. Claire says they’ve seen online claims that “Aromanticism is just a term used by straight men who don't want to settle down”—basically, equating Aromanticism …

11. But knowledge of botanical Abortifacients, Shelton says, was largely lost as the church sought to eradicate the tradition by equating the work of herbalists with witchcraft.

12. An equating verb (such as 'be' or 'become') that links the subject with the complement of a sentence Familiarity information: Copulative used as a noun is very rare

13. To exercise the ferret: to have sex. An unromantic male expression equating the penis with the aggressive, hyperactive animal and its well-known proclivity for wriggling into crevices and tunnels.

14. Arabica coffee comes from the beans of a Coffea Arabica plant, which originated in Ethiopia. Arabica is the world’s most popular coffee type, equating to over 60% of cups drank

15. Respiration testing in the peat indicates a significant aerobic biodegradation rate of 27 mg/kg/day, equating to an estimated hydrocarbon removal rate of 5 kg/day across the 3600 m 2 plume area.

16. $597,747 Saved: In Egypt, the Agitator system and MOCS tool save multiple trips, providing 20% faster ROP and 42% lower cost per foot than best offset, equating to huge cost savings to the customer

17. A total of 35,948 registered voters on the general list were thus excluded from the vote, equating to 17.11% out of a total of 210,105 registered voters on the general electoral roll.

18. Syntactically connecting sentences or elements of a sentence; "`and' is a Copulative conjunction" an equating verb (such as `be' or `become') that links the subject with the complement of a sentence

19. Some linguists have claimed that these lexical suffixes provide only adverbial or adjectival notions to verbs. Other linguists disagree arguing that they may additionally be syntactic arguments just as free nouns are and thus equating lexical suffixes with incorporated nouns.

20. Adj Copulative syntactically connecting sentences or elements of a sentence "`and' is a Copulative conjunction"; n Copulative an equating verb (such as `be' or `become') that links the subject with the complement of a sentence

21. Some groups in the West, where Afro-pessimism abounded in the past, have now started talking of the African lions, no doubt equating in their minds the performance of the African economies with the Asian tigers of yesteryear.

22. I opened my TED talk with a slide with that one word on it, using it to call out our Ageist habit of equating the word with “yucky” or “sad” or “useless.” Using “old” to mean flat-out terrifying—the point of this movie title—does even more damage.

23. Copulative: 1 n an equating verb (such as `be' or `become') that links the subject with the complement of a sentence Synonyms: copula , linking verb Type of: verb a content word that denotes an action, occurrence, or state of existence adj syntactically connecting sentences or elements of a sentence “`and' is a Copulative conjunction”

24. High Belemnite δ 18 O values, sometimes equating to paleotemperatures of less than 10°C in the early Middle Jurassic, have been interpreted as indicating nektobenthic habitat (e.g., Dutton et al., 2007; Wierzbowski and Joachimski, 2007).Other evidence for a nektobenthic habitat include: (1) δ 18 O values similar to benthic foraminiferal values and higher than planktonic foraminiferal values