equated 的定义
e·quat·ed, e·quat·ing.
- to regard, treat, or represent as equivalent: We cannot equate the possession of wealth with goodness.
- to state the equality of or between; put in the form of an equation: to equate growing prosperity with the physical health of a nation.
- to reduce to an average; make such correction or allowance in as will reduce to a common standard of comparison.
equated 近义词
balance; think of together
更多equated例句
- The correspondence between elementary particles and representations is so neat that some physicists — like Van Raamsdonk’s professor — equate them.
- However, the automation systems of the advertising platform will equate all of these conversions as valuable to the business and optimize its campaigns accordingly.
- The city of Detroit had a 55% turnout, which equates to more than 250,000 votes.
- Such wallets are often equated with the payment services offered by Apple and Google, but also include apps used to store Bitcoin and other new types of money.
- Other analogies include equating breathing Delhi’s air with smoking a pack of cigarettes a day.
- Wright referred to the “autism crisis” and equated having a child with autism to “not living.”
- Agrees that illegal immigrants could be equated with ‘biological weapons’
- Every year, the legend grows of the evil deeds committed by the Zionists in 1948, crimes routinely equated with the Holocaust.
- The words at issue were when Robertson equated people having sex with animals as the same as sex between consenting gay adults.
- She equated what she felt for God with a Proustian desire, which she agreed was “the highest point of existence.”
- The mancus was equated with thirty pence, probably from the time of its introduction.
- The Bog of Allen in Ireland is authoritatively equated with holland.
- The accession of Theopompos was equated with that of Alcamenes by Eratosthenes.
- The maximum grades on tangents are 116 feet per mile; on curves the grade is equated one-tenth to a degree.
- But, it will be seen, the 'tenuit' of Domesday is equated by the 'emit' of the Exon book.