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Перевод: equate speek equate


[глагол]
равнять; уравнивать; приравнивать; быть равным; быть эквивалентным; записывать в виде уравнения; соответствовать; считать равным


Тезаурус:

  1. Restless and dry-mouthed, they drove to the market to shop for odds and ends of food and drink as though the act of purchasing Pepsi Cola and crisps would somehow equate with eating and drinking them.
  2. Thus, whereas the Conservatives have tended to equate active citizenship with a sort of Samuel Smiles social self-help, SLD supporters have expressed themselves in terms of self-government.
  3. If we were to seek an explanation in the fact that Gandhi, as we have seen, does not equate ahi s with non-killing and notes the distinction between ahi s and hi s by indicating that hi s means killing from motives of anger or selfishness and ahi s means refraining from so doing, then it might be possible to be a believer in ahi s and yet kill, provided the killing is not prompted by angry or selfish motives and is performed with detachment as one's duty.
  4. We see here a tendency to equate any change with "reductionism", whereas those who want to see women ordained as priests believe that this change will bring about an enrichment of the traditional pattern of ministry, without in any way altering its essential features.
  5. A variety of possible contributing factors have been put forward: that biological factors make women more vulnerable than men; that women are socially disadvantaged by the roles they are expected to perform, and psychologically disadvantaged by socialization preparing them for these roles; that women express their emotions more readily; and that health professionals are more likely to equate feminine characteristics with ill health (Weissman and Klerman, 1977; Penfold and Walker, 1984; Corob, 1987).
  6. At the local level it may not always be easy to equate a framework of locally agreed targets with the specific levels of achievement nationally.
  7. Why does he seem to equate circumlocutory pomposity with profundity?
  8. I equate the loss of ornamentation in our times as the loss of architecture.
  9. There is a tendency, especially since the publication of Miliband's Parliamentary socialism (1961), to equate labourism with the history and practice of Labour within the parliamentary sphere.
  10. It is, however, difficult for the cheesemaker to equate maintaining quality and making money.
  11. If the downwards forces are each one Newton at distances of plus and minus four metres, then the anticlockwise and clockwise moments equate at 4 Nm.
  12. He was brought up in an atmosphere of churchmanship, his revered father being a prominent layman who devoted his life to the reunification of the Anglican with the Roman church, and it was perhaps through him that he acquired what seems to have been an unconscious appreciation of the utility of goodness in public life; one notes in his writings a tendency to equate prayer with will.
  13. It was all too easy, as I did, to equate those with electricity prices."

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