Use "equated" in a sentence

1. Sometimes equated with Vesta.

2. Shock and hypotension were equated.

3. The two cannot and should not be equated.

4. 14 Hawa was thus equated with mindless passion.

5. Anil himself equated his work with a "magical realism".

6. Accounts from residents equated the explosion to an earthquake.

7. Those three bills, together worth 1.7 million Bolivars, equated to …

8. However, these elements cannot be equated with an actual plea.

9. The Benthic zone in deep waters is equated with abyssal plains

10. “Most took the easy way out and equated Christianity with patriotism.

11. Coornhert argued that religious difference should not be equated with disturbing public order.

12. 6 Franklin Roosevelt, who equated wealth with energy and idealism, heartily endorsed the appointment.

13. The "blame game" is often equated with accountability, and public servants are easy targets.

14. Neither the American public, regulators nor remedial contractors have equated biotreatment with genetic engineering.

15. Synonyms for Allegorized include assimilated, analogized, compared, equated, likened, associated, bracketed, classed, grouped and matched

16. The word Accomplice has gotten a bad rap as it is often equated with wrongdoing

17. Synonyms for Analogized include compared, equated, likened, bracketed, assimilated, related, matched, paralleled, parallelled and correlated

18. of Comptroller and Auditor - General have been equated with the judges of the Supreme Court .

19. They aim their advice squarely at nubile girls who have falsely equated romantic love with happiness.

20. In later literature this instrument is generally equated with the sata tantri veena which means the .

21. 30 The constellations in the night sky cannot be directly equated with the heroes of Greek mythology.

22. (17) According to KWW, capacity limitation and production limitations are different concepts that should not be equated.

23. Profits are maximized when production is allocated such that marginal revenue (MR) is equated to marginal cost (MC).

24. The upper Caste is the white majority (equated to the Indian Brahmin upper Caste), the lower Caste is the Black minority (equated to Indian Dalits), and the middle Caste is comprised of undifferentiated “Hispanics” and Asians, striving to make it into the upper Caste.

25. The recommended levels they suggest for a typical passenger vehicle should be equated to 5.5 metric tons of CO2.

26. In an abundance of enthusiasm generated post-Sputnik 1, the Convergent style of thinking was rapidly equated with typical intelligence

27. 16 Similarly depth of feeling can become equated with prejudice, and the arousal of emotions in schools can become indoctrination.

28. I get concerned when it appears that strong emotion or free-flowing tears are equated with the presence of the Spirit.

29. It is with these Barons, and not the Peerage that the Baronages of the Euopean continental mainland have always been equated

30. 2000 bc), the Amorites were equated with the West, though their true place of origin was most likely Arabia, not Syria.

31. They equated normal recognition and amnesic recognition by extending exposure time for the Amnesics and then comparing amnesic recall and normal recall.

32. Synonyms for Averaged include amounted to, equated to, balanced out to, evened out to, did on average, done on average and made on average

33. Most generally, the term Bullying is equated to the concept of harassment, which is a form of unprovoked aggression often directed repeatedly toward another individual or group of individuals.[1] However, Bullying tends to become more insidious as it continues over time and may be better equated to violence rather than harassment

34. There must also be a recognition that there is a difference between what I would call lifestyle emissions and survival emissions and these cannot be equated.

35. Nisan, in the spring, is consistently equated in these books with the ‘first month’ of Exodus ; Nisan, indeed, was the first month of the Babylonian calendar.

36. Khendjer "has been interpreted as a foreign name hnzr and equated with the Semitic personal name h(n)zr, "boar" according to the Danish Egyptologist Kim Ryholt.

37. For example, the Chinese god of war, the Guandi, was now equated with a figure which had long been identified with the Tibetan and Mongolian folk hero Geser Khan.

38. The region called Cush is usually associated or equated with Ethiopia, but more accurate is Nubia, the region south of Egypt (says the Oxford Companion to the Bible)

39. The balance theory of N. I. Bukharin is the most disputable theory in his philosophy, often equated with mechanism, even upbraided as the original theory of N. I.

40. It is also significant, because too often, religious identity in general and Christian identity in particular, has been equated with Antiabortionism, and allowed to be defined by the Religious Right

41. It is also significant, because too often, religious identity in general and Christian identity in particular, has been equated with Antiabortionism, and allowed to be defined by the Religious Right.

42. I know that the current view of sex is unbridled recreation, but that fact is the very reason why the word Chaste is quasi obsolete and often equated with marital infidelity.

43. 17 Perhaps the success of Buffy the Vampire Slayer can also be equated to the success of Will and Grace for its integration of homosexuals into stereotypical images of success and attractiveness.

44. What is an Antimartyr? Some people have equated the term "martyr" or "victim", with what I believe should be called an "Antimartyr" to save those two terms in their original meaning

45. The accepted Six Sigma scoring system thus cannot be equated to actual normal distribution probabilities for the stated number of standard deviations, and this has been a key bone of contention over how Six Sigma measures are defined.

46. ‘Elizabeth I called the attempted invasion of England a ‘tyrannical, proud and Brainsick attempt’.’ ‘Thus, within the masque text, blackness is equated with beauty, love, and wisdom, but the prejudice stirred up by some ‘poor Brainsick men’ has convinced the Daughters …

47. Gregory’s views were underlined by Patriarch Sophronius of Jerusalem (634-638), and Agnoetism was formally condemned at the Sixth General Council in 680, at which Themistius was equated with Severus and Apollinaris of Laodicea as a heretic (Sacrorum conciliorum collectio, Vol

48. Symbolizing one of the five base elements, some scholars have equated the worship of Agni to a more pre-hindu period where the worship mainly consisted of the visible elements of the universe such as water, earth, trees, air, etc.

49. Notaries and bailiffs cannot be equated with court clerks or tax bailiffs since the latter are officials or servants of the State or of other public bodies and provide services as subordinates of and for the account of their employers .

50. Although in percentage terms Government expenditure on education had increased by only a small margin, the dollar figure for absolute expenditure equated to an increase of approximately 50 per cent in inflation-adjusted terms and thus represented a significant rise in purchasing power.

51. Anthropocentrism is necessarily equated with an attitude that condones policies favoring the short-term interests of the few over the long-term in-terests of the many, it is not exactly obvious why being human-centered is so toxic to the environment

52. But as such Anno Mundi time systems became very popular, they created a huge problem: end-of-world fever, caused by a threatening Seventh Day that equated to the end of the 6000-year period and corresponded to a date 500 years after Christ's birth year.

53. In a dissent on other grounds, Chief Justice Leo Strine opined that Commercially reasonable efforts is “a comparatively strong” commitment, one that is only “slightly more limited” than “best efforts.” 4 Indeed, in the proceedings below, the Delaware Chancery Court had all but equated the term “Commercially reasonable efforts

54. To occasion death the Hyleg must be afflicted either by the conjunction or configurating evil rays; of the Anaretical stars, and the distance between the significator (or Hyleg) and the aspect when measured by the celestial arc of direction, and equated by a certain measure of time, which the experience of ages has determined for truth, will in

55. The term Algolagnia has fallen into rare usage, and there is no entry for it in the American Psychiatric Association's DSM IV-TR, however inflicting pain on others has been termed "active Algolagnia" and equated to the pathological form of sadism in Mosby's Medical Dictionary, which also equates the pathological form of masochism to "passive

56. But if one grants, as Leibniz does, that that there is an infinitesimal straight stretch of the curve (a side, that is, of an infinilateral polygon coinciding with the curve) between Abscissae 0 and e, say, which does not reduce to a single point then e cannot be equated to 0 and yet the above argument shows that e2 = 0.

57. Socrates, as recorded in Plato's dialogues, is Customarily regarded as the father of Western ethics.He asserted that people will naturally do what is good provided that they know what is right, and that evil or bad actions are purely the result of ignorance: "There is only one good, knowledge, and one evil, ignorance".He equated knowledge and wisdom with self-awareness (meaning to be aware of

58. Result It is Potential available and it must be Compellingly lifted.: Résultat Il existe potentiels et lui doit être soulevé impérativement.: It is to be equated however not Compellingly with an impairment of the health.: Elle ne peut pas être égalée impérativement cependant avec une atteinte de la santé.: Shirley-Ann George, president of the alliance, makes the case Compellingly.