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"equate" Definitions
  1. equate something (with something) to think that something is the same as something else or is as important

961 Sentences With "equate"

How to use equate in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "equate" and check conjugation/comparative form for "equate". Mastering all the usages of "equate" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Success is subjective, period ... America, for whatever reason, we started to equate success with celebrity and equate success with wealth and equate success with fame that's maybe somebody's definition of success, but success is subjective ... Maybe happiness to you is just being able to provide for your family.
Taylor has a master's degree, which she mentions any chance she gets, and seems to equate emotional intelligence with book learning, while Corrine seems to equate it to her ability to win.
While this shouldn't be true — virginity doesn't equate to perfection!
They stressed this did not equate to actual fraudulent voting.
In Xinjiang the government seems to equate Islam with terrorism.
People often equate the two but I think that's wrong.
Power itself doesn't equate to adoration on Game of Thrones.
Sadly, this time out, that didn't equate to much excitement.
Maybe at this point I equate femaleness with being radical.
This should equate to an extra 236 to 234 lbs.
The biggest mistake is to equate leadership entirely with charisma.
The nuttiest apostles of such notions equate immigration with genocide.
They don't equate being on top with being the best.
First things first, minimal does not equate to being boring.
My thought bubble: Expressed concern doesn't necessarily equate to action.
This doesn't necessarily equate to full privatization of public goods.
EQUATE did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Couture neophytes have a tendency to equate elaborate with creative.
For some people, this can equate to millions of dollars.
What she refuses to do is equate slowing with stopping.
I know that not voting doesn't equate lack of concern.
But in the meantime, people shouldn't equate anecdotes with data.
Indeed, being afflicted with C.T.E. may well equate to insanity.
I would equate it to a Japanese version of Walmart.
Even so, it is wrong to equate WeWork with Regus.
"Rejection should not always equate to racism," Mr. Bollanga said.
Does that equate to hold your hat in your mind?
You can't equate sacred sites and burial grounds with trash.
I would equate it to being like Mr. and Mrs.
"Does travel equate to being a bad person?" one asks.
Real time data from phones could equate to more warning time.
Many people equate organizing their finances with going to the dentist.
Looking younger doesn't always have to equate to being more beautiful.
Exports, for instance, equate to about 200 percent of its GDP.
In this case, a 6 percent commission would equate to $19,512.
Definitely. People equate money with what it is in real life.
Dwindling foreign-exchange reserves equate to just nine months of imports.
A lot of people equate the EU with Europe -- it's not.
"I would equate our relationship with that of siblings," she says.
So thickness does not equate to being sick, but mine was.
Such a reduction would equate to 350,000 tonnes of methane annually.
The innovative array of shades equate to instant inspiration for me.
But that doesn't mean it's okay to equate slavery with employment.
It doesn't equate to a 500 percent increase in wait times.
ASKING QUESTIONS Ordinary citizens - and media - often equate arrest with guilt.
But I believe congressional oversight does not equate to operational control.
While most clubs would equate that with success, United are different.
It is unsafe bus operators that directly equate to unsafe travel.
That doesn't necessarily equate to the class and the legal fees.
"I didn't equate his behavior with the disease," the neuropathologist said.
They wanted to feel desire, which they didn't equate with reciprocation.
"But to equate that with criminal corruption, that&aposs a joke."
This is because relevant experience doesn't always equate to good experience.
The figure would equate to $7373 trillion in current list prices.
That would equate to around 4.25-4.5 times the unit's Ebitda.
Finally, it is absurd to equate conventional weapons with nuclear warheads.
These figures equate to global market shares of 44% and 37%.
That would equate to $20,000 in state aid per job, per Reuters.
I equate it with my beloved pressure cooker except that it's electric.
These tiers equate to roughly 500 points on the skill rating scale.
Are we really to equate the killer whale with the murderous students?
That would equate to a $32 billion market opportunity within four years.
" She adds, "I equate it to sending your child off to college.
It's a terrible thing, because size doesn't, of course, equate to beauty.
But to equate the protest and the counter-protest reveals his shallowness.
Multiple tweets from the group's account equate Kalanick and Uber to Trump.
Some go as far as to equate blocking ads with stealing services.
But it's false to equate even hateful speech with use of force.
Do 113 fat girls in swimsuits equate to gore, porn, racism, sexism?
That is a remarkably reflexive urge to equate the opposition with criminality.
A numerical majority of the full House would equate to 218 votes.
"The last time I checked, liberty didn't equate to abortion," Graham said.
Collins stressed she does not "equate" threats she has received to Ford's.
"Too many guys want to equate smarts with being uptight," Ross said.
The proposed job cuts equate to 14 percent of the bank's workforce.
So we knew that they would equate the word 'cancer' with death.
" And it wouldn't be so quick to equate "working class" with "white.
"Rhetoric alone regarding L.G.B.T. issues does not equate to doctrine," it added.
Most people equate warm-weather dressing with lots and lots of skin.
Nonscientists sometimes equate the profession with the pursuit of cold, hard facts.
Success in one field does not equate to success in any other.
They equate the value of homes sold per year to $25 billion.
Fair use industries equate to 28503 percent of the U.S. annual economy.
It's easy to equate wealthy people with flashy sports cars and mansions.
Executives at traditional organizations tend to equate years of service with aptitude.
But Medicare doesn't equate to employment-based health insurance for several reasons.
"Poor bookkeeping doesn't equate to criminal activity," Mr. O'Donnell said after court.
I want opportunities that equate to my intelligence, education and employment history.
"To equate Zionism and Judaism is a very severe charge," she said.
Taken together, unprovisioned NPLs equate to close to 85% of San Marino's GDP.
Those 26,2500 employees would equate to roughly 503 percent of its seasonal workforce.
"An approval from DOPSR does not equate to public release approval," says Harris.
When I think about the effect of software, I equate it to water.
This would equate to around €1.125bn, based on the unit's approximate €180m Ebitda.
But "merely not having somebody stop you doesn't equate empowerment," Scott told me.
The financing will equate to just under 6 times Prosol's approximate €130m Ebitda.
Soon enough, I began to equate bodies with levels of worthiness of love.
I do think a lot of people equate modesty with being boring, though.
" Pro tip: don't equate dozens of sexual assault and rape allegations as "gossip.
That means that time-of-flight doesn't necessarily equate to the true distance.
So is it fair to equate this modern political scandal with the mob?
Until 1980, a lapse in appropriations did not equate to unpaid federal workers.
A good shareholder yield strategy does not equate to a high-dividend strategy.
"Some people were like, 'How dare you equate Jefferson with slavery,'" he recalled.
"You lose the argument, Jeffrey, when you equate it to Nazis," Bachman said.
He has repeatedly sought to equate their criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism.
To equate Apple's switch with China's censorship, as Mr. Zittrain does, is ludicrous.
The newsroom has shown that innovation doesn't have to equate with poor quality.
On the pitch, the best individual players didn't equate to the best team.
And they definitely don't equate their right to free speech with anyone else's.
Super cheap earbuds ultimately equate to equally cheap sound quality, according to Slice. 
Detractors like to equate Senator Bernie Sanders's socialism with Soviet and Chinese Communism.
But the fees equate to an annual interest rate of about 2400 percent.
But let's not equate someone with a broken taillight with a dangerous criminal.
I equate it to having to get dressed up, in the old days.
Although many people equate one with the other, blockchain is not just Bitcoin.
I equate this feeling to a recurring bad dream I used to have.
Trump, for example, has not hesitated to equate economic policy with foreign policy.
I equate this brand with this thing, and that's why I value it.
I am unable to find the words to equate how tremendously emotional I feel.
Some in the disability community equate the closing of sheltered workshops with school desegregation.
But even if I were, preferred admission doesn't equate to much of an opportunity.
We don't blame you if you equate winter fashion with lots of dollar signs.
He learned from his father that having a job didn't automatically equate to dignity.
To call out the next person who dares equate my size with my strength.
I hope people continue to equate that with who he was as an artist.
And do you know how they then equate that level of stupidity to conservatism?
But they do not equate with success in the face of rising wildfire threats.
The fancier place does not always equate to the better experience in my book.
Then again, being in touch with one's sexuality doesn't necessarily equate to being polyamorous.
I don't see why anyone wouldn't equate this to a baby bear with wings.
But to equate Snapchat to WhatsApp, WeChat, or even Facebook Messenger is also off.
Pymetrics determines which traits equate to high performance for specific roles in the company.
You don't necessarily equate that with someone who's got a lot of social grace.
Channing said that as a result she came to equate the theater with church.
"[Trump] would often equate that she was retarded," one source told The Daily Beast.
The death of American conservatism should not equate to the death of American liberalism.
This would equate to a $450,000 tax cut for this VIP group of earners.
And that will equate to about 30 miles a day, six days a week.
According to the Mi Terro website, about 5 shirts equate one glass of milk.
Many Democrats have said that Trump's firing of Rosenstein would equate to firing Mueller.
"Look if you're going to equate, I would call it spying," Shlapp fired back.
The formula the Kibble balance yields to equate mass and electrical power is complicated.
None of those things equate us becoming better human beings or more loving partners.
"To equate the self-regulation code with censorship is grossly misleading," the association said.
Equate presented a "good story" to investors in Abu Dhabi and Dubai on Feb.
J. J. I would equate the experience a bit like working on a movie.
I don't want to believe that people equate being ill with a moral failing.
Mr. Trump, for example, has not hesitated to equate economic policy with foreign policy.
Equate hired Citi, JPMorgan, KFH Capital, MUFG and NBK Capital to lead the deal.
President Trump is wrong to equate the Democrats' positions on immigration with open borders.
With about 180 customers a day, that would equate to $15,000 takings per store.
Even so, it is not fair to equate WeWork with the more conventional Regus.
"I don't think it is right to equate Islam with violence," he told reporters.
Many observers equate our current craze to the tulip mania of 22019th-century Holland.
I think if you equate that to business, it's in many respects somewhat similar.
To equate feminism with not taking medication is not only completely wrong, but dangerous.
But alas, that's not how hit products always work; being first doesn't equate to success.
Magritte's point is simple: to equate the representation with the object is to have lied.
The women comics share an obsession with weight, and seem to equate thinness with virtue.
" As he got older, Piana said he learned that "more doesn't always equate to better.
"Letter From Birmingham Jail," 1963 King did not equate nonviolence with no action at all.
Here&aposs the thing, and I always equate things too, my brain always thinks sports.
Rounding out the list were sunscreens from brands Equate, La Roche Posay, and Banana Boat.
So buying Walmart's Equate brand can save you money for the essentially the same formula.
I just can't equate the death of Aboriginal people with the burning of a rag.
Well-intentioned or not, recycling slogans that equate gender with biology excludes our trans friends.
If all 111 containers were full, that would equate to around 2,900 tons of trash.
Their expectation has been that the report's very issuance will equate to evidence against Trump.
They equate supporting the B.D.S. movement to supporting Hamas and the destruction of their homeland.
KO: Does that equate to a change in policy in how the Mav organization operates?
That would equate to a 20.4 percent rally from levels around $2506,2000 a tonne now.
We typically equate her sister, Khloé Kardashian, as the patron saint of the ombré look.
But for me, falling in love doesn't equate to inhibiting your freedoms or my own.
Having a tentative space, menu, and money does not necessarily equate to opening a restaurant.
But many in the ecosystem equate investing at pre-seed to buying a lottery ticket.
Would you equate "watching most of one episode" with being a "viewer" of that program?
The regulations classify internet service providers as common carriers, which critics equate with utility regulations.
As for the opera gloves: Well, few accessories equate with elitism like elbow-length nappa.
Those little arrows equate to billions of dollars lost or gained in an instant, NBD.
And, look, we make it clear in the report that persistence doesn't equate to effectiveness.
What's new in jazz doesn't always equate to youth, or even any clear stylistic break.
When critics equate "form" with appearance or "content" with plot, they're being facile, he said.
But this new research does hint that pregnancy does not need to equate to fragility.
That would equate to one of every two Americans, and foreigners were affected as well.
But a better title doesn't necessarily equate to a faster or more direct career progression.
"  The word "sex" does not equate to some vague, ill-defined concept of "gender identity.
Trump then sought to equate his withholding of aid to Ukraine to Obama administration decisions.
Of course, simply dropping money in Des Moines doesn't always equate to rising poll numbers.
That could equate to several hundred dollars in additional insurance premiums annually, according to Court.
Such commentaries from Xinhua do not equate to government policy, but often reflect official thinking.
It is only through the misinterpretation of poverty statistics that one can equate the two.
They also argue voters are unlikely to equate repealing the tax law with higher taxes.
We have a tendency, as a culture, to equate morality with bearing a heavy burden.
"I used to equate land work to slavery," said Marsh in an interview with VICE Impact.
Summer does not only equate to trips to the beach and a string of backyard cookouts.
Companies tend to equate leave with lost revenue: They get nothing when mothers take time off.
For someone earning that wage, a 2 percent pay increase would equate to roughly a quarter.
" The authors equate "orthodoxy" with being "faithful to the teaching of the church on the subject.
What McElhaney doesn't like is when people equate not saving money with being overweight or lazy.
Potentially, a $93 test could equate to getting out of a $1,800 to $3,000 college course.
The firm's four potential election scenarios currently equate to a 50-50 chance for either candidate.
It's not a perfect measure: Nonemployer firms don't specifically equate to workers in the gig economy.
On August 15th Mr Trump appeared once again to equate white supremacists with demonstrators opposing them.
You're definitely not alone if the colder months equate to pretty somber-looking outfits for you.
The chair of the ECB supervisory body, Daniele Nouy, said guidelines do not equate with laws.
" That particular comment  got Holt's attention , as the professor fired back, "I didn&apost equate them.
The financings equate to 6.0-7.0 times the business's approximate €700m-€750m Ebitda, the sources said.
Just banking primarily on small phone lovers in the West might not equate to volume either.
"At no time should we, as parents, equate allowing physical contact with being nice," Murray advises.
A lot of women equate liberation with covering themselves up but still having a free mind.
But in plain language, words don't always equate as much as they express continuities of meaning.
With premiums now at $2628 per person, that would equate to paying $28500 million this year.
"True skepticism doesn't equate into reflexive debunking, but an honest inquiry into the data," Dolan stated.
So, if you weigh 180 pounds, that would equate to 60 grams of protein per day.
The job cuts equate to 13% of the company's workforce, the Guardian reported on Tuesday.4.
"To equate what goes on in Venezuela with what I believe is extremely unfair," Sanders said.
The financing will equate to just under 6 times Prosol's approximate €130m Ebitda, the sources said.
It would be folly to equate "The Intervention" with "The Big Chill," but there are parallels.
"Many people equate budgeting with deprivation, and this only fuels them to spend more," Sun added.
It is encouraging to see, but policy shifts do not necessarily equate to transformed classroom practice.
Prince has consistently pointed out that allowing free speech does not equate to supporting a cause.
Reformers too often equate combating the mammoth problem of American gun violence with strengthening gun regulations.
That would equate to 15-16 times its core earnings excluding capital expenditure, the person added.
Because they're thinking of shit games, and they're thinking their childhood memories equate to actual quality.
But to equate these political tendencies with concern for equality is a misreading of the trend.
Yet, despite this more holistic view of health, policy makers tend to equate health with healthcare.
It comes from legislators, law enforcement, insurers, and leaders who equate prescribed opioids with illicit heroin.
Loans of this level equate to around 6.25 times Parkdean's approximate £120m Ebitda, the sources said.
But comfort did not equate to competency when she received her inheritance outright at age 18.
Loveless affairs were best, Ms. Athill determined, for she had learned to equate intimacy with pain.
Because most people equate it with power, and there's a lot of discomfort with female power.
Being quarantined, self-isolating, or following an order to "shelter in place," doesn't equate to loneliness.
But they didn't equate the potential fall of the president with the fall of the Republic.
Many people equate qualifying for a loan with getting the best possible rate for that loan.
This would equate to an increase in the structural deficit of close to 211% of GDP.
Trump recently went so far as to equate the United States and Vladimir Putin's murderous regime.
Lower Kelvin values equate to amber-toned hues, while higher Kelvin values are cooler and bluish.
And yet we equate performance on tests with potential, as if learning happens in a vacuum.
Ms. Trump has a following in China, where young professionals often equate material wealth with success.
"I do worry sometimes when people equate [artificial intelligence] and robotics with job loss," Wilke said.
"There is a growing agreement that natural hazards do not equate to natural disasters," Sy said.
We tend to equate poultry production with factory farms, downstream pollution and 21.50-piece McNugget buckets.
To equate their work to drug pushers is demeaning, out of bounds and out of touch.
Although we are in this world where we revere our leaders — like we equate Facebook with Mark Zuckerberg, we equate micro-finance with Muhammad Yunus — that actually the best nonprofits tap into the talents of their entire staff to leverage their talents and to keep them engaged.
Analysts expect the turnout to equate with a big vote in favor of the anti-graft drive.
That infuriates many, who equate wriggle-room in the rules on resolution with licence to ignore them.
It has become easy to equate public violence with acts of terrorism, but it's not always so.
A short skirt does not mean you're a slut; not does a long dress equate to prudishness.
For those who equate theater with campy shows on Broadway, Pipeline Theatre Company's Beardo defies all expectations.
On an all-senior basis, debt would equate to up to 4.5 times Ebitda, the sources said.
Q: People normally equate quality with high prices, but some items you feature are less than $20.
"For me, being a wife and being a woman, happiness doesn't equate to having kids," Graham revealed.
This makes the overall discount – or "total property asset reductions" in Aberdeen's words – equate to 26 percent.
But to just go to the pub—I just equate that with feeling bad the next day.
I equate that to knowing your equipment and being able to get your best out of it.
Current expectations for a 0.3 percent month gain would equate into 2.8 percent year-over-year growth.
Authorities also froze Cunha's access to his personal assets, which equate to about $70 million, officials said.
I think I for some reason equate losing blood with needing like to replenish it with food.
But no matter your pet name of choice, they all equate to one thing: something extra-cozy.
His company's near-term target is $10/kg, which would equate to roughly $4/gal of gas.
In the post-Carlin American free speech tradition, we are inclined to equate humor and social critique.
The Equate brand's versions of Neutrogena Ultra Sheer Sunscreen and Eucerin's Original Healing Cream also scored high.
Box office success doesn't always equate to Oscar-worthiness, but Sully's estimated $35.5 million debut doesn't hurt.
" Foster agreed, adding, "We equate light skin to having curly hair, finer hair, slimmer features, smaller features.
In the simplest terms, the average of all those numbers together equate to your character's total Power.
But to Cranmer — who has analyzed LHC data in his work — the news did not equate failure.
They are chasing the clicks, and the number of shares has sadly come to equate journalistic value.
The fortieth U.S. president knew that drawing a firmer line did not equate to taking reckless action.
Earnings of $2.3 billion, unveiled on Wednesday, equate to an annualized return on equity of 13 percent.
To equate democratic socialism or social democracy with revolutionary communism is therefore both definitionally and historically inaccurate.
If you're unfamiliar with the IHG Rewards Club program, you may wonder what those points equate to.
Cynically choosing to equate ethnicity with bias is hardly more appealing than simply being ignorant or bigoted.
The purpose here is to equate Republican rule with legitimacy, and Democratic rule with lawlessness and plunder.
You might not equate sneakers with technological advancement, but Carbon and Adidas could quickly prove you wrong.
The success of my ministry, many, many ways I can equate it to the women around me.
I'm not trying to equate learning a new game with mastering astrophysics, but it's not easy, either.
That brief moment of second-guessing does not equate the claims that she wishes to transition again.
To put the Diggs catch in the proper context, we can't equate it with the final round.
That would equate to $51.34 a share, a 27 percent premium above CalAtlantic's closing price on Friday.
But it's completely intuitive, once you silence the sad and greedy voices that equate weight with worth.
Here again, the anonymous-Republicans equate a bigger defense budget and more weapons with strategy and strength.
I don't equate the two, but I do believe that words and how they are used matter.
People might instead equate "film music" with the currently popular mixture of strident synthesizers and pounding percussion.
A large bottle of Equate Hand Sanitizer with Aloe can help kill germs without wrecking your wallet.
Narrow beauty ideals have led us to equate self worth with thinness and thinness with self-restriction.
Will more airlines equate the threat from Hong Kong with that from China, and ban all flights?
UAW said hourly labor costs equate to just 5% to 6% of the price of a vehicle.
Do this for two months, and you'll start to equate failure with a tool for being better.
It's called the habitable zone because we equate the presence of water with the possibility for life.
"I equate this to how groups of guys talk about sports and fantasy football," Ms. Ludens said.
Under current levels, that would equate to roughly $1,800 a year, or $150 a month in assistance.
I am a little surprised that advertisers are trying to equate YouTube and Facebook video ad views.
He also appeared to equate counterprotesters with the hate groups that they had shown up to oppose.
On Tuesday, Trump appeared to equate torch-bearing white nationalists with the protesters who demonstrated against them.
Under current levels, that would equate to roughly $243,225 a year, or $225 a month in assistance.
Along the way, Colbert got to do one of his favorite things: Equate Trump with a dog.
They automatically equate it with what might be the best utility sports coat a man can buy.
Contrary to what lawmakers on both sides of the aisle claim, coverage does not equate to care.
The result would equate to a sentence 99.5% lower than the recommendation from the US Sentencing Commission.
Typically, such break-up fees equate to approximately 3 percent to 4 percent of a deal's size.
But all too often, shoppers seem to equate "organic" with "healthy," and that's not always the case.
" In a tweet, the IAMAI wrote that "to equate the self-regulation code with censorship is grossly misleading.
Lean too far in one direction, and you risk saying that mental health issues literally equate to superpowers.
Brazilian journalist Andre Trigueiro said Temer's "vision" reminded him of biblical references that equate women to Adam's rib.
Throughout the interview, Hall seemed to equate putting women on the air with paying them fairly and equally.
The director wrongly thinks these two things are connected, that ticket sales should equate to some critical endorsement.
Remember, ethical fashion doesn't necessarily equate to off-trend and unattractive items — and these stores prove just that.
Many tech companies equate creating products that appeal to women with all things pink, sparkly, and overly stylized.
They equate any kind of struggle or misfortune as if there must be something that you're doing wrong.
The EU worries about these complications, but they do not equate the return to the chaos of 2015.
Based on a 2,000 calorie per day diet, a 10 percent cap would equate to 200 calories total.
Plus, spying can equate to mistrust and insecurity in a relationship, says Francie Stone, PsyD, certified sex therapist.
EA provided a statement via email saying that the system in Battlefront II does not equate to gambling.
Pronouncements by China's state-run news outlets do not equate to government policy, but can reflect official thinking.
He loves to equate creamy paint with thick frosting, and let's face it, no one does it better.
Wearing a sweater doesn't always have to equate to looking prim and proper (or the other extreme — lampshading).
"I equate it in some ways to when Obama became our first African American president," she told me.
No, a disruption-hungry group of them has decided to equate his hypersexed chatter with politically incorrect bluntness.
Strong glutes also equate to better athletic performance—faster, more explosive movements—and decrease your risk of injury.
That would equate to $20,000 in state aid per job if the project hits the 400 employee target.
These and other misguided policies equate to an attack on our ability to start, grow or maintain businesses.
The agreement would equate to $20 billion in cash and about $47 billion in British American Tobacco shares.
We should not equate the performance of a handful of companies with the overall state of the economy.
Frivolous clothes did not equate to education, reason, and intelligence — all revered as male qualities at the time.
On the services front, Xiaomi made around 9.9 billion yuan in revenues that equate to over $1.5 billion.
But perhaps that's only because I equate poverty with hunger, and I've never experienced that type of pain.
Lewis also concluded that instructional materials were quick to equate blackness with slavery, especially when writing about Jamestown.
Islamic State "turned public opinion against us", leading the outside world to equate the rebel fighters with terrorists.
Unlike Kanye, she did not equate herself with the geniuses of silhouette, and drown her clothing in bombast.
He listened intensely as the president appeared to equate white nationalist hate groups with those who protested them.
Republicans here can equate these "witch hunts" to things that have happened to them in their own lives.
And increasingly, people are realizing that a number on a scale does not equate good health or happiness.
Assuming one concedes that this election was unfair (which it was not), does such unfairness equate to illegitimacy?
"It's hurtful when people equate the government making up these choices with the whole of Bermuda," she said.
One percent of an EU population of about 512 million would equate to more than 5 million people.
The median estimate of neutral, currently around 3 percent, would still equate to at least three more rate hikes.
They pretty much equate to HD ready, Full HD, and Ultra HD – each a little better than the last.
In a federal civilian workforce of 2.1 million, a "few" can equate to tens of thousands of nonproductive workers.
That, somehow, his definition of work evolved into something that did not immediately equate with being unhappy and unfulfilled.
When we equate homeownership with citizenship or being a good community member, we need more nuance to that story.
We tend to equate them with hostility and self-absorption, an idea that has been backed up by research.
That would equate to 81 cents to the male dollar -- not 28.53 cents, as Trump claimed in her speech.
"To equate not wanting to get shot in the face with not wanting to write an essay is obscene."
"How people can equate sharing photos of yourself or your body online as being utterly 'self obsessed,'" she wrote.
But it is fundamentally wrong to equate groups like Black Lives Matter and its supporters with groups like those.
In our culture, people traditionally equate work with self-worth—worrisome, given what is happening to the traditional job.
"I'm surprised you aren't persuaded," Scalia added, after insisting he was not seeking to equate sodomy with murder. 9.
I equate using Bluetooth headphones with using my home Wi-Fi network; one where there are known dead zones.
In December, Moody's gave a Baa2 rating to Equate's sukuk programme, which matches the issuer rating of Equate itself.
Equate it to a flight attendant advising you to always put on your own oxygen mask before assisting others.
These figures equate to an 18 percent decrease in the probability that the women who drank more would conceive.
But those on the hard right who equate white Western civilization with the Roman empire are in profound error.
They tended to equate looser gaits with extroversion and adventurousness, while seeing the more clipped walkers as more neurotic.
To the Editor: You equate the Canadian physician-assisted suicide proposal with the Oregon, Washington State and Vermont laws.
From a producer perspective, brand extensions primarily equate to adding SKUs to shelves and getting butts in bar stools.
However, it's unfair and disingenuous to equate these mistakes with the outbreak of fake news in the last year.
By any definition, Oprah is an empowered, self-actualized, wildly successful woman — unless you equate success with weight-loss.
Commentary from influential Chinese state-run media does not equate with policy, but can be reflective of official thinking.
The usual pro-piracy activists have criticized the deal as they equate efforts to fight online piracy with censorship.
But it's just not a good comparison to equate this with spending $1.53 trillion on, say, Medicare-for-all.
Many people equate spending less time on their phones with denying themselves pleasure — and who likes to do that?
You can envy and resent the Patriots' success, but you cannot equate them with the current administration in Washington.
Journalists quickly started to do the math, extrapolating from international mortality rates how many deaths this would equate to.
He worries that young people will equate the A.B.A. with the G League and consider it a secondary league.
In total, the deals equate to a likely production increase of as much as 1 million barrels a day.
They would equate today with a woman's size 8-9, a junior's size 8 and a woman's size 3.
"I would never equate one moment of the Civil Rights movement to anything that BLM has orchestrated," he said.
"I equate finding a big ram with walking into a big gravel pit, looking for a diamond," Burns said.
The phones will also feature new L-shaped batteries that should equate to longer battery life, according to Kuo.
I like to equate our spirit as being too strong to die, and that's — that's why we're still here.
"Let's not equate the love language of physical touch with sexual intercourse," Chapman said when I brought this up.
However, an apparent lack of judgment doesn't equate to accusations of treason and criminality, as some have recklessly charged.
"Make no mistake, I certainly do not equate the actions of nationalist demagogues with those of Daesh," he said.
But when Ring cameras enter a town, it's easy for cities to equate surveillance with being a good neighbor.
In terms of democratic socialism — to equate what goes on in Venezuela with what I believe is extremely unfair.
I think it forces us to look at our lives as a snapshot and equate our worth to likes.
Internet companies may have miscalculated in encouraging employees to equate their work with their intrinsic value as human beings.
The general public didn't equate Paul Manafort with jackets made of thousands of dollars' worth of exotic bird leather.
This would equate to a bowl of Skittles roughly 83 feet long, 123 feet high, and 9 feet deep.
Physical arousal does not equate to consent—this is especially important to keep in mind when considering disabled people.
Fans also seemed to equate him with Leia as a character who tended to get shunted to the side.
" He goes on ... "It is not right to equate horrific incidents of sexual assault with misplaced compliments or humor.
And because she's been conditioned to equate sexual desire with love, Atkins retreats, and any sense of rebellion is quashed.
By the time the Model Y comes to market in 2020 that would equate to more than 1 million vehicles.
"Being supportive of minority language rights does not equate to foreign alignment with that country," he said in an email.
Even left-wingers often equate the worst excesses of the elite that they attack with the behavior of elite females.
Moving forward, liberals need to be clear that their support for free markets does not equate to support for capitalism.
The director did not equate 'extreme carelessness' with the legal standard of 'gross negligence' that is required by the statute.
"There can be long hours developing coursework or grading papers, but it doesn't necessarily equate to stress, " Glassdoor's Dobroski said.
"With hyperactivity you see the flies run around more, and this is what we equate to being buzzed," Hansen explained.
However, we feel it is inappropriate to equate requesting Ms. Jenkins to cover up with sexual harassment or rape culture.
But to compare Instagram Stories' 200M DAUs with Snapchat's total 161M daily active users is to equate apples with oranges.
Voting rights advocates equate felony disenfranchisement with other forms of voter suppression like voter ID laws, gerrymandering and voter purges.
Most people may equate January with self-imposed Netflix hibernation, but let's be real: We all have events to attend.
The main measure of U.S. unemployment, at 4.4 percent, is below the level many Fed officials equate with full employment.
What the trend really shows, Moffett argues, is that rising streaming services don't equate to a loss of cable subscribers.
Clinton hit back that a vote 14 years ago does not equate to a plan to destroy ISIS in 2016.
They are implementing policies that equate large families with same-sex partnerships, belief in God with the belief in Satan.
New Jersey is one state that does not equate substance exposure — mothers who take drugs while pregnant — with child abuse.
Ruffles are romantic, but not in a carefree way; ruffles equate love with epic poems and sobbing outside fire escapes.
However, we feel it is inappropriate to equate requesting Ms. Jenkins to cover up with sexual harassment or 'rape culture.
The raw number of patents does not necessarily equate to leadership in developing self-driving cars, Trippe said. Non-U.
One is the quickness and frequency with which so many of us equate displays of religious devotion with actual rectitude.
"Gradually moving policy rates out of negative territory does not equate to monetary tightening," the bank said in a note.
That will equate to a 28500 percentage point drop in the fourth quarter of 6900 -- the shutdown began on Dec.
The cubes run about $1.70 for the price of two that are meant to equate to a cup of coffee.
Those reserves are worth around $33 billion and equate to enough gas to supply the entire world for a year.
"President Trump seems to equate the strength of the economy with the nation's capacity to produce raw steel," Ikenson said.
The actions by the CBO, along with consideration of military construction cuts, equate to a breach of faith and trust.
To equate a physical object with the alchemy of desire is absurd, and that is why we resort to it.
So this is why it's very important to sit down and ask [yourself], what do I equate happiness to be?
"To equate tobacco addiction, a lifelong addiction to a deadly product, with freedom, we think is completely wrong," Sherwin noted.
"I guess maybe people equate vulnerability with horror games, so maybe that's where the comparisons come from," he told me.
The other issue-framing challenge for Republicans is not to equate support for renewables as an attack on fossil fuels.
Few people other than the bishops, however, equate the pope's words at that meeting with an apology — including Mr. Fontaine.
These last survivors equate life on land with religious integrity, vowing not to abandon their diminishing patch of terra firma.
"It will require further validation, and doesn't equate with preventing heart disease or cancer or other outcomes," Dr. Topol said.
If the courts equate poor choices during pregnancy with child abuse, then poverty and bad nutrition can become criminal acts.
But far-right nationalists equate Tito with an oppressive Yugoslavia, which violently disintegrated after his death in 1980 at 87.
A May 1967 moment occurred when the United Nations General Assembly voted to equate Zionism with racism in November 1975.
Based on current UK baseload power prices, that could equate to a loss of around 120 million pounds ($162 million).
"People think they don't need to be seen because they equate a Pap with reassurance of everything else," she said.
The fact of the matter is triggering people does not equate to sparking meaningful conversation surrounding America's gun violence epidemic.
Unlike the communications director and Mr. Trump, Mr. McCain does not equate service to country with service to the president.
They equate dot-orgs with nonprofit groups and issue no warning of the dangers lurking beneath the domain's positive aura.
"People make mistakes all the time, but to equate the shooting of Eric Harris with that is absurd," he said.
And sure, clothes are a "must" too – but does that really equate to spending all your spare money in Topshop?
Bawa invests in real-estate syndicates, which, in layman&aposs terms, equate to crowdfunding for institutional-quality real-estate deals.
He said the Justice Department was trying to equate an emolument with a bribe from foreign or state government officials.
That makes him sound dovish by American standards, because we've come to equate dovishness with opposing policies that neocons support.
"Ordinarily … I would never equate hard-right views on [social issues] … with the rantings of an Islamist terrorist," Noah wrote.
So to equate him with the Ku Klux Klan which is what the Southern Poverty Law Center effectively did is absurd.
While Tillerson noted Turkey had suffered attacks at the hands of PKK, he did not equate the group with the YPG.
You can do cooler stuff if you are willing to shell out "gems," but those gems equate to very real dollars.
Mascots essentially equate Native Americans with animals, she said, while hypersexualized Halloween costumes silence indigenous women, framing them as fictionalized characters.
The 23,000 level would equate to another 8 percent in decline among the Dow group of stocks before the selling stops.
If one political party tries to redraw the map, citizens can quickly check themselves whether the changes would equate to gerrymandering.
It seemed like the filmmakers wanted to make the gas more flammable, Burks speculates, and people might equate hydrogen with flames.
That would equate to increasing total share capital to 3.85 billion riyals, representing an 18 percent capital hike, Reuters calculations show.
If you equate being a woman, being delicate, and sort of light, and elegant or, I don't know, whatever you do.
But for some reason, the conversation around aging still hadn't necessarily been there ... I equate 'anti-aging' to the word 'diet.
At $8-10 per month that would equate to $15bn-19bn in recurring sales; Disney's revenues last fiscal year totalled $59bn.
Americans have been conditioned to respond to the flashiest personality and to equate naked ambition with intelligence, determination, and strong values.
Continuing the trend for the year and just the one simple change would equate to a total savings of over $400.
It was an attempt to equate the act to cross burning, which can be prosecuted as a violation of civil rights.
It suggests an American culture that remains reluctant to equate the interests of powerful men and the interests of vulnerable girls.
Yes, I'm about to equate The Little Hours, a bawdy romp about three nuns in the year 1397, to The Iliad.
It stumbles into some of the pitfalls of this kind of conceit, in particular it tends to equate species with race.
Many of us understand training does not always equate to real life situations, and efforts in the battlefield can go wrong.
As Cycling Weekly pointed out, nobody wants to damage a new television, and few people equate an expensive bike with electronics.
It's also happening in cities that we don't necessarily equate with mass transit—cities like Atlanta, Houston, and Salt Lake City.
Adoring fans equate Trump with success and, through the miracle of mass media, consider him a close friend and kindred spirit.
To assume that they would, they added, would be a "naive projection" of a human tendency to equate expansion with conquest.
But according to the agency, this does not equate to a car being "safer" than others with the 5-star label.
Unfortunately, a large contingent of tennis fans, analysts, and even players themselves still equate service breaks with mental lapses and frailty.
Also in August, Trump appeared to equate white supremacists with counter-demonstrators after the Charlottesville violence -- something that prompted Tennessee Sen.
Scientists there have attempted to stage the progression of this change in the brain, and equate it to various clinical factors.
To equate "being mean to white people" with the actual systemic oppression and marginalization of minority groups is a false equivalency.
Authorities saw no apparent signs that would equate to being injured in a fall and are investigating the cause of death.
Analysts say Ms. Tsai skillfully used Mr. Xi's speech to equate the 1992 Consensus with Beijing's "one country, two systems" formula.
While new technologies like A.I. are transforming every job in every industry, that does not equate to all workers being displaced.
Critics of midazolam equate its use to cruel and unusual punishment because of its questionable effectiveness in putting someone to sleep.
A large majority of voters don't equate business success with political success, according to a new Hill-HarrisX poll released Monday.
In doing so, however, they often make an honest mistake: They equate balance with the midpoint between the two parties' ideologies.
That would equate to nearly $27 billion in lost revenue, based on a Reuters calculation of the cost of the phones.
"They equate density with 'inner city,'" is the way Yonah Freemark, a scholar of urban development, put it the other day.
EST in full family sizing (note that the "men&aposs" sizing will include smaller pairs that equate to women&aposs sizing.).
But we should be careful not to equate its motives, means and results with the type of torture to which Sen.
"We've come to equate drama and crisis with history," said Kevin Rozario, an associate professor of American studies at Smith College.
In a chaotic Tuesday news conference, Trump appeared to equate torch-bearing white nationalists with the protesters who demonstrated against them.
Instead of neutralizing her critics, the test further inflamed criticism that she was trying to equate DNA results with cultural kinship.
Serious money does not equate America with Mr. Trump, and those obsessed with American decline ignore the state of its rivals.
That would equate to an average monthly payment of $322, representing a "big percentage" of their take-home pay, the report said.
That's the way I'm put together, I don't equate the amount I spend with the enjoyment I'm going to get from something.
The nature of the facilities very much matters, Fahey counterargued, saying it was wrong of the appellate court to equate the two.
And a lot of companies do not equate four years of military service to four years at a university or state institution.
If you equate "smart" with "pretty much hassle-free," the new Dyson Pure Cool is the kind of smart device you'll like.
The Republican Party is so thoroughly dominated by "movement conservative" ideas that we generally equate "Republican" with "conservative" in our popular discourse.
Speaking of risk, one of the biggest problems with the way investors think about volatility is that they equate it with risk.
Plenty of people equate horror with straight-faced scares, as if its inherent value can be measured in ounces of cold sweat.
I don't ever want to equate that, and I would never put it on the same plane as women who have been.
I'm not sure who came up with the theory that long curls equate to easy, carefree hair — but they were sadly mistaken.
At $100 a year each that would equate to $25m to $50m in revenue, on perhaps $7m to $8m in production costs.
Forgiving the NFIP's debt would essentially equate to a bailout of predominantly coastal states paid in part by taxpayers in landlocked areas.
While we may initially equate fast food restaurants with burgers and fries, most of these speedy stops also shell out soft serve.
But who would give the N.C.P.A. that power, and why would a court equate the N.C.P.A. with a federally certified labor union?
Between the lines: Thompson notes that being narrow does not usually equate to driving high return rates expected by venture capital backings.
New Nudes If you equate nude makeup with everyday makeup, may we remind you that it has the word nude in it.
For some reason, February 14 has come to equate with giant teddy bears and flower bouquets the size of a small house.
No one -- most especially an equally reviled and "corrupt" president -- should ever be allowed to equate or minimalize such a liberal touchstone.
"One caveat is we should not equate the collapse of the [Venezuelan] economy with the collapse of the regime," Noriega said. Sen.
"Orinoco Flow" is one of those strange pop culture objects that is proof that mass enjoyment doesn't always equate to dunderheaded stupidity.
Walmart's healthcare and beauty products are sold under the Equate brand, which has "traditionally been rated excellent and won awards," Karolefski says.
I equate the value of Black majorettes in their respective communities to that of step dancers, as documented in Amanda Lipitz's documentary.
These dynamics, which have become emblematic of the status quo after World War II, do not necessarily equate to optimal policy outcomes.
For me, because I equate how getting dressed makes me feel modern and new and alive, then that's how I feel better.
Reality check: This is technically true, but a negative — not withdrawing from this treaty — does not equate a positive — prioritizing climate change.
I equate it to having two shoes: You need a left and a right; that's the way I look at my music.
Many of the apps equate cosmetic surgical procedures with going to the salon to get your hair or nails done, Cangello says.
Trump also appeared to equate counterprotesters with the white supremacists and neo-Nazi groups who incited violence in the college town Saturday.
The median of those dots moved the overall forecast to equate to two more hikes this year – likely in September and December.
If the numbers pan out, they would equate to about 290 percent of the 's market cap and 27.4 percent of GDP.
The drink was caffeine-free, and the idea was that consumers would equate a clear soda with thoughts of purity and health.
Equate Hand Sanitizer With Aloe, $1.98, at WalmartI managed to get very few colds and flu during my time as a teacher.
He has railed against neoliberalism, which he appears to equate with corruption and the failure to diminish poverty and inequality in Mexico.
More than once I have heard Iranian imams, with preposterous certainty, equate flimsy women's attire in the West with decadence and prostitution.
Even former Reagan administration officials — like the seemingly ever-present, pro-Trump talking head Jeffrey Lord — have sought to equate the two.
Reminder: Filing for Chapter 11 does not always equate to going out of business, and Remington has some new financing in hand.
If you equate "help" with shitting your brains out you're in luck, cause lemon water actually can possibly help you do that.
The Gambling Commission, who hand out gambling licences, equate excluding winning bettors with other businesses refusing to deal with high-risk customers.
He believes that Friday's market response did not equate to the importance of the U.K. getting beyond the first phase of negotiations.
The historian Matthew Frye Jacobson has suggested that the act was one of our country's first attempts to equate citizenship with whiteness.
"To equate criticism of the policy of the state of Israel with anti-Semitism is simplistic and dangerous," the festival director added.
To read this chart, take every row as a grouping of elements and assume the arrows equate to a greater-than sign.
If you want to equate the Trump administration with a football team, it should be my pathetic home team, the Cleveland Browns.
I'd reasoned that the contra deal at a brothel must have been straight forward: how many blowjobs did a set equate to?
Equate Petrochemical is 85% owned by the Dow Chemical Company and Petrochemical Industries Company, a subsidiary of government-owned Kuwait Petroleum Corporation.
This would equate to a decline of 10 percentage points since Inauguration Day, slightly outpacing the nine-point decline among all Americans.
It can be easy to equate genitalia with gender when teaching children about their body parts, but Ehrensaft cautions against doing this.
But for Mr. Carson, a devotion to bettering urban youth does not equate to promoting racial integration, at least not through government.
The estimated carbon dioxide emissions associated with the project would equate to adding about 3 million cars a year to the road.
"More leverage or greater flexibility on terms does not equate to higher risk," said Gary Creem, a partner at law firm Proskauer.
"Overall, Carney signalled that the combination of conventional and unconventional tools would equate to around 250 bps in cuts," Scotiabank analysts said.
The agency did not disclose more details on where the funds, which equate to about $20203 billion each year, would be spent.
Days after the protests, Trump blamed the violence on "both sides" and appeared to equate white nationalists with the counterprotesters opposing them.
Even Netflix's senior executives equate much of that growth to the company's strengthened ties with cable and cellphone operators around the globe.
"People often equate the success of an individual with the success of an organization, but they're not highly correlated," Mr. Pfeffer said.
"This respect for free speech does not equate to anti-Semitism," Ms. Tlaib wrote, defending economic boycotts as peaceful and constitutionally protected.
But it points to an important truth: Some physicians equate "suffering" with "commitment" and believe that a residency should be grueling and difficult.
" Companies in the real estate, rental and leasing industries reported business as "exceeding expectations" and anticipated that "2019 should equate or exceed 2018.
Both involved payments that legal experts have said could equate to in-kind contributions to Trump's campaign in violation of federal election laws.
Effective right this second, 211,22 on-demand audio and video streams will equate to one album sale, the organization said in a statement.
"To equate that with voter fraud is irresponsible," Heather Gerken, a professor of law at Yale University and expert on election law said.
"I certainly did not equate people who voted for Brexit or Trump with a fascistic 'hard right' that must be stopped," he said.
"I equate it to getting the golden ticket," Fogler, 40, told PEOPLE about being cast as Jacob at the film's New York premiere.
Evident disparities along with these stressors can equate to a chronic toll on our health, even if there are resources within our reach.
Many in medicine, as well as patients and caregivers, continue to equate more procedures, more chemotherapy, and more intensive care with better care.
They equate this to Republicans who argue that large tax cuts will not increase the deficit because they will unleash extraordinary economic growth.
While some would equate nude language learning with a deleted scene from Idiocracy, I think it's an interesting addition to the streamer arsenal.
They do not equate to verified, accurate information on the ownership details of businesses unlike the systems currently in place in the BVI.
The new literature on algorithmic fairness usually doesn't simply equate fairness with accuracy, but instead defines various trade-offs between fairness and accuracy.
The new numbers equate to these pollutants being the cause of one in four deaths of children 1 month to 5 years old.
And stale brands equate with weak sales, and weak sales means we don't do our part in adding jobs and driving the economy.
The president's words ignore that important and difficult debate and equate what CIA officers have done in the past to an objective felony.
It didn't help that media organizations tended to equate Clinton's controversies with the far more egregious controversies that disqualify Trump from being president.
It's especially difficult to watch Rob equate saying Dream is biracial with inciting a "race war" since Chyna is silently sitting right there.
One large U.S. coffee importer estimated this will equate to a reduction of 10,000 to 20,000 containers of coffee leaving Brazil each month.
You may not equate Kate Winslet with action-adventure, but the Oscar-winning British actress knows a thing or two about disaster films.
Here's the thing: It's cool she got a "sick burn" or whatever, but retweets do not equate to political activism or actual votes.
If applied to its entire acreage in the East Midlands, this would equate to 270 trillion cubic feet of high quality natural gas.
" Goin-Kochel, who was not involved in the new study, emphasized that it found only an association, which "does not equate to causation.
BARF's public message board does in fact veer into strident libertarianism and juvenile ribbings, like pictures that equate its opponents to Adolf Hitler.
Given this intensity on the left, the Democrats' victories should be blowouts, but protests don't necessarily equate to victories at the ballot box.
It is pure McCarthyism to equate support for the constitutional rights of a person, or even a president, to complicity in his policies.
But Trump has tried to equate immigration in general, and free trade, with fear of both homegrown terror and the new global economy.
As someone who went to a long list of elite schools myself, including Yale, I understand the temptation to equate intelligence with worth.
Despite ongoing public relations crises, Facebook kept growing in Q3 2019, demonstrating that media backlash does not necessarily equate to poor business performance.
I don't think it's fair to equate it to a novel or to prose, but I do think poetry is a wonderful equivalent.
As you'll see below, if you have another eligible Chase card, that $150 in cash back can actually equate to 15,000 Chase points.
That would equate to a downturn on the magnitude of what occurred in the early 1990s, when unemployment rose by 2.8 percentage points.
We see diversity onscreen, and as bad as that diversity is, it doesn't equate to the diversity as to who's signing the checks.
Emergency loans could equate to more than $4 trillion in lending power through the leverage of the Federal Reserve, administration officials have said.
Why do you think that so many in Western democracies today equate wealth with intelligence, or look to the rich to solve problems?
The prediction, made before a second crash prompted the plane to be grounded around the world, would equate to more than 3,000 deaths.
BDI Managing Director Joachim Lang said that would equate to around 17 billion euros ($19.30 billion) being slashed off GDP this year alone.
Certainly, there are echoes of the 2016 election insofar as the majority of Howland's townspeople seem unquestioningly to equate Hadi's fortune with virtue.
The team's skull logo and brown and white colors are prominent around the quarter, where many people equate the club to a lifestyle.
Biden's campaign accused Sanders of misrepresenting then-Senator Biden's vote to authorize the war, arguing it didn't equate to support for the war.
To pierce the surface and access the piping hot broth inside is to be reminded that mild does not necessarily equate to boring.
However, we cannot confirm his death, as the occurrence of the same name does not necessarily equate to this being the same individual.
With these dual perspectives, we can: Even small incremental efficiencies can equate to significant amounts over time, depending on your income tax bracket.
I've talked with well-to-do parents who equate obedience with quality, but unless you want your child in boot camp, that's unhealthy.
Having a set schedule to sit at a desk or show up on-site does not equate to efficiency or money well spent.
No one would equate a stray bullet through a window or a parking lot brawl with the tragedies of Parkland or Sandy Hook.
In many parts of society today, whether in popular culture, academia, the media, or politics, there's a tendency to falsely equate noise with results.
While the widely-read paper is run by the ruling Communist Party's People's Daily, its stance does not necessarily equate with Chinese government policy.
As people longed for a president who does not equate Nazis with "very fine people," the tweet became the most liked of all time.
If the projection for a trillion-dollar deficit by 2025 pans out, that would equate to 3.8 percent of GDP, according to the CBO.
That would equate to more than S$3 million ($2.16 million) for ST Engineering's booth, the show's largest at more than 2,000 square meters.
They do know that a four-kilometer-across on-land copper pit would equate to a 100-kilometer manganese nodule mining area, said Hannington.
Since 2001, they have suffered backlash from those Americans who equate all Muslims with those who have attacked civilians out of some jihadist cause.
All that sugar and house alcohol will equate to a major hangover and likely more bad food decisions, plus it'll spike your blood sugar.
Of course, box office is only a measure of commercial success, and it can be dangerous to equate box office haul with cinematic greatness.
"The (Finnish) age structure is very different at the moment, but in 15 years it would equate with that of Japan's today," Liikanen said.
The CDC currently reports the average American woman's measurements equate to a size 267 (though other studies put her between a 267 and 267).
"If you can equate signs in the yard with being popular, I would say probably Trump is a front runner around here," said Thompson.
Hosts like Liu, the clothing line owner, say they welcome the stricter rules because it sets a bad example to equate streaming with sex.
Given our history, Americans tend to equate revolution with progress and an escape from oppression, even though many other revolutions ended in brutal dictatorships.
For the first three months, HPE is also offering an additional 50,000 API units (which roughly equate to API calls) for all paying users.
The Koch brothers hate unions, so Walker tried to be the candidate of union bashing, going as far to equate public unions with ISIS.
Determination tools like AFST equate poverty with signs of risk of abuse, which is blatant classism — and a consequence of the dehumanization of data.
The two words equate to a demand, suggestive of women who claim the right of ownership of their bodies no matter their diverse stories.
For instance, the final sentence, written by the GPT-2, attempts to equate the words "separation" and "coherence," even though these words are antonyms.
That would equate to a 12.5 percentage point increase in gross margins to 55.5 per cent, according to analysts Jim Suva and Kate McShane.
However, it could also be more cogently argued, based on the Clinton experience, that the likely acquittal would equate to innocence to most Americans.
Richard Knights, analyst at Liberum, said a price of say $1.5 billion would equate to about 9 months' cash flow at current coal prices.
"Any time he steps up and tries to equate two groups or two conversations, I think that muddies the water," he said of Trump.
Calculating the median of the dots then pushed the overall forecast to equate to two more hikes this year – likely in September and December.
That would roughly equate to a point for every five of its 83,000 electric cars, about 1 percent of the vehicles on its roads.
What better evidence that we equate political power with masculinity than a political candidate literally defending the size of his manhood on national television?
It is also inevitable that forces on both ends of the political spectrum will ardently, and mistakenly, equate collaboration with a capitulation of principles.
We fail to equate a strong, powerful civilization to a woman's ability to nurture her child and simultaneously contribute to her family's financial survival.
They equate an art fair experience with the gallery — that the gallery is just a big ole art fair booth of our own design.
Today, many people equate Planned Parenthood with abortion, but, according to the organization, abortion procedures actually make up only 3% of its total services.
I hesitate to equate an employer with a spouse, but this is less comparable to a prior marriage than to an ill-fated fling.
For some soldiers, those comments seemed to equate Iraqi soldiers — by virtue of their nationality and religion — with the very terrorists they were fighting.
"How can they equate me with someone who injects steroids or someone who constantly lies and tries to obstruct authorities," he said on Twitter.
He had probably told us that his female students wore Western-style clothing assuming that an American might equate conservative dress with Islamic fundamentalism.
"I've condemned neo-Nazis," Mr. Trump told reporters, who interrupted him repeatedly when he seemed to equate the actions of protesters on each side.
Ultimately, it is about generating enough clean, renewable energy as to equate to the amount of energy that is being consumed by the family.
"One can equate the dickey to makeup in a strange way; it was used to hide blemishes and emote a pristine image," Lisby explained.
Many people equate the name Carmel with Carmel-by-the-Sea, a tourist magnet whose downtown shopping district channels a 21910th-century European village.
And Secretary of State Mike Pompeo seemed to equate Biden's unproven influence in Ukraine with Russian efforts to shake up the 2016 U.S. race.
That would equate to more than S$3 million ($2.16 million) for ST Engineering's booth, the show's largest at more than 2,000 square metres.
I get that some people equate Brady/Belichick/Kraft/Patriots with Trump, and view New England's fifth title as proof that there's no God.
It's easy to equate the job of a filmmaker to that of an architect, building a film from the ground up, brick by brick.
What a majority of consumers do not understand is that higher THC-A percentage strains do not necessarily equate to a bigger or better high.
" For Wu, following that advice hasn't always been easy: "There was a time in my life when I would equate my personal value with employment.
Should the credit be eliminated and 50,000 people buy electric cars in this country next year, that will equate to $375 million in the coffers.
Registered voters don't necessarily vote, and there is no evidence that voter rolls populated by deceased or departed voters equate to fraudulent votes being cast.
She tweeted that she wasn't trying to equate her experience with that of a Black person but was trying to stand up for her husband.
One study from an unnamed state in the American South found that this "summer learning loss" could equate to a quarter of the year's education.
Extrapolating that sample to the circa four billion connected devices that exist globally, BullGuard claims this could equate to around 185 million vulnerable IoT devices.
Apple says the Mac Pro will be able to drive up to six 63K displays, which would equate to a resolution north of 122 megapixels.
Either way, the attempt to equate the utter blandness of Face ID with something exciting is ultimately unsuccessful (if understandable — it's an advertisement, after all).
It's these purchases that technologists equate to "natural selection," but it's nearly impossible for most people to opt out of a lot of these arrangements.
Todd believes it is only a matter of time before more companies equate recreational cannabis use with a drink had on a worker's own time.
The two-thirds of Facebook users who get news on the platform, then, would equate to 221.0 percent of the overall population, the study found.
At one point the bishop of Tucson, Arizona, as you mentioned, Edward Weisenburger seemed to morally equate those enforcing the border with people committing abortions.
For example, the store brand product comparison app Brandefy ranked the Equate Beauty facial cleansing towelettes a 91 percent duplicate of the Burt's Bees version.
I would equate this moment to the big PC race of the late 1980s – big corporations fought each other to end up on your desktop.
A single PROMIS case note entry does not necessarily equate to an IP address provided by the FBI; PROMIS is frequently updated throughout AFP investigations.
I feel like your personality has been a little testy and the only thing I can equate it to is that you're seeing this guy.
I think sexy, a lot of people equate with a physical look, but I think it's more with what comes out from inside of you.
He reversed course the next day and once again blamed "both sides," appearing to equate neo-Nazis with the people protesting against them in Charlottesville.
Telling someone's story sounds deceptively simple, but Hollywood needs to reckon with the fact that an exposed truth does not equate to an examined one.
Standard Chartered said a strike of 25 days would equate to lost output of 85,000 tonnes, more than an expected global surplus of 80,000 tonnes.
That would still equate to a recovery rate of over 50 cents on the dollar, more than double the Indian average in such bankruptcy cases.
Using Tuesday's share prices, that would equate to a roughly 50-20213 joint venture worth around $15 billion, with control of Yahoo Japan and Line.
And if all 215 Republicans in that case vote for the same person, they could effectively choose the speaker because they would equate a majority.
EQUATE is taking indications from local and international banks for bullet as well as amortising loans, the Gulf-based banker and a second source said.
"Low cornering speeds equate to relatively low tire energy, and so there is therefore a strong tendency to try and achieve a one-stop race."
While it's true that there are challenges that affect diverse neighborhoods, it is insulting to our culture to equate being poor with living in hell.
A council of top business executives disbanded over the summer after the president appeared to equate torch-bearing white nationalists with protesters demonstrating against them.
"I'm in favor of allowance for children if they work for it, because then they equate the value of money to time worked," O'Leary explains.
Combined with at least $28503,22019 in dark money, these contributions equate to a nuclear-level show of national political force in a suburban Colorado community.
The last thing I want to do is equate the very real emotional consequences of my last relationship to the plot of a video game.
But the response to the way that she expressed it illustrated the perils of seeming to equate people with, and measure them by, their creeds.
"Courts and the justice system do not equate internal misconduct by police to criminal activity by civilians," Kuehne told me, clearly frustrated with the imbalance.
"Words cannot equate the impact that Joe has had on this franchise since his arrival in San Jose in 143," Sharks general manager Doug Wilson.
A few small experiments don't equate to a superhuman takeover, or to a technology that will necessarily reach a much larger population, Clarke points out.
There's a certain level of sexual aggression [in the town], but I don't think that I would equate it with what's happened in our industry.
Largely they attempt to equate non-employee status to working hour flexibility, which, as my colleague at Jalopnik Aaron Gordon points out, is utterly unfounded.
Quotas to export eggs to the Europe Union equate to around 1.5 percent of just Avangard's annual output, let alone that of the entire sector.
In research, "biomarkers" are often used as substitute for an actual outcome, but their presence does not always equate to the clinical presence of disease.
His remark that "Americans are dreamers, too" and a long passage about MS-13 gang violence appeared to some observers to equate immigrants with criminals.
Inna Sertrakova, who works at the agency, said the pageant in May aims to challenge Russian attitudes that equate beauty with an ultra-slim figure.
Despite the sardonic way Mr. Cohen's films equate gangsterism with all-American capitalism, there's not much in the way of effective subversion, subtextual or otherwise.
Mental illness doesn&apost make someone less able to do a job, nor is it a mental failing — and it doesn&apost equate to violence.
Based on January-August import levels, 80 days' worth of oil imports by China would equate to about 788 million barrels, according to Reuters calculations.
And high-spend families tend to remain high-spend families, suggesting that long-lasting conditions or chronic diseases still equate to long-lasting financial burdens.
A lot of the skepticism surrounding album bundling leans on a central question: does the sale of merch equate to the sale of an album?
"Equate Dry Shampoo includes a specific warning, like most aerosol products, that it may explode if heated and not stored as directed," the statement read.
That would equate to light vehicle sales of about 17.6 million vehicles, which would break last year's record of 17.47 million vehicles, using Autodata Corp figures.
Staying in legislative session more does not necessarily equate to getting more work done, said Don Stewart, spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican.
It was sold via the app for £825,000 ($1 million) in October 2016, which would equate to an estimated £8,250 commission, if Vero took one percent.
The offenses Manning was convicted of under the U.S. Espionage Act "would equate to an indictable offence, namely Treason" if committed in Canada, the report reads.
The transfer market was not built for faith; it exists for certainty – a certainty that additions, any and all, will inevitably equate to on-field success.
The source said that many pilots viewed the offer as insufficient because it would equate to a 7 percent drop in pay when adjusted for inflation.
When she giggles it's incredibly wholesome, making it even harder to equate this young girl with the dress-up adult she's playing in public and online.
Yet it would be a mistake to equate America's loss of its quasi-monopoly in the supply of higher education to foreigners with long-term decline.
Many patients with terminal illnesses who want to deactivate these devices find resistance from the health system, since some continue to equate deactivating them with euthanasia.
However, the How To Get Away With Murder star's talents don't always equate to a salary on par with some of her peers in the industry.
I'm not die-hard by any means but I would equate the Nintendo universe with the Disney, DC, or Marvel universes in terms of cultural significance.
To be confirmed, Pierluisi will need votes that equate to a majority of the 51 members of the Puerto Rico House and of the 27 senators.
If India were to import 2700 million tonnes of potash in 22016-217, the savings from the proposed subsidy cut would equate to almost $100 million.
Sanger hoped to eliminate the need for abortion, and if she were alive, she would be dismayed at how many people equate her organization with it.
However, the figures do not necessarily equate to websites running as hidden services: they may also include things like XMPP servers, used for chatting, for example.
If you multiply that national revenue figure by the 32 teams, that would equate to around $8 billion distributed to teams by the NFL each year.
It is not exactly fair of Reid to equate Comey's unusual transparency and officiousness about the Clinton investigation with his comparable reticence about Trump-related inquiries.
An Airbus spokesman declined to comment on the provisional thinking on deliveries for 2017, which would equate to production of just under 7 aircraft a month.
And while food isn't booze (and I don't agree with those who equate alcoholism with disordered eating), there's no question that we sometimes use it similarly.
"Feel good" doesn't automatically equate to "depoliticized," and boy bands now have an added responsibility to reflect the culture in which their fanbase is growing up.
The data from General Administration of Customs did not include an April number, but it would equate to about 24.8 million tonnes, based on Reuters calculations.
"This bill is disturbing because it has been co-sponsored by a lot of legislators, and would equate abortion with murder in Ohio," she told CNN.
Editorial The Supreme Court has said emphatically that it is morally and constitutionally wrong to equate offenses committed by adolescents with those carried out by adults.
Bringing in the unemployed and economically inactive could equate to $2.08 trillion in added value per year, or a 10.2% boost to U.S. gross domestic product.
It is equally foolish for those who believe that enhanced interrogation is a misleading euphemism for torture to equate these polices with that of Nazi Germany.
"Latino political power is not the panacea nor does it equate to instant gains overall or lifting people out of poverty," he told our Jenny Medina.
Westbrook's triple-doubles equate to winning for the Thunder, who are 33-9 when he records a triple-double and just 13-25 when he doesn't.
BK's 1Q17 results equate to a 1.05% annualized return on average assets (ROAA), up from 0.96% in the sequential quarter and 0.88% from a year ago.
At 15 inches, the mattress is thicker than most, which tends to equate to better comfort but can make it hard for keeping fitted sheets on.
Revenues from the State Oil Fund SOFAZ are projected at 9.2 billion manats, which would equate to 45 percent of the budget's total revenues next year.
"Even those who do not consciously harbor negative associations between race and criminality are regularly infected by unconscious views that equate race with violence," she wrote.
I equate it to if I walked out of this room and I broke my leg, tomorrow I would sing a song about breaking my leg.
But enjoying food doesn't necessarily equate to strong culinary know-how—at least that's what a new survey damning Britain's food knowledge would seem to show.
Digital hashtag communities can be an introduction to identity exploration but it does not equate to that visceral connection made in person in an art space.
Whether Trump doesn't equate the two things — his presidency with the women's midterm election wins — or whether he's simply accepted defeat is something only he knows.
"Closures do not in any way equate to a decrease in number of incarcerated people," said Michael Powers, the president of the state's correctional officers union.
At 213D, you have to mentally finish the beer brand name "Miller" with LITE and equate "price" with RATE to get "Able to read," or LITERATE.
But the problem with his type of approach, in its Kremlin variety, is that it seems to equate international competition with a Darwinian fight for survival.
"More guns in more cars may simply equate to more road rage incidents in which a gun was brandished, or fired, research suggests," The Trace reported.
And although Beijing continues to succeed in its campaign for states and businesses to sever ties with Taiwan, this does not equate to China gaining allies.
For example, the Fed has also begun disclosing more information about its stress tests, which critics equate to giving banks the answers ahead of the test.
Tax efficiency can increase annual portfolio returns by up to 1 percent, which can equate to hundreds of thousands of dollars over a 30-year period.
BMW (BMWYY) said in a statement that it considers the investigation to be "an attempt to equate permissible coordination of industry positions" with unlawful cartel behavior.
And if you equate success with wealth, it might be time to start writing down your goals, both large and small, in order to become rich.
For example, the Fed has also begun disclosing more information about its stress tests, which critics equate to giving banks the answers ahead of the test.
Pay attention to Amy Besa, the owner of Purple Yam in Brooklyn, who moved me when speaking about how deviating from tradition doesn't equate with inauthenticity.
It features a cameo from Jonah Goldberg, the National Review writer best known for his universally discredited attempt to equate New Deal liberalism with European fascism.
Efforts such as these emergency refuges exemplify that smallness does not equate with simplicity; rather, these structures can confront even greater design challenges than gargantuan buildings.
Khan said people had a right to express their concerns about Trump's polices, but that it did not equate to a dislike of the U.S. in general.
He's definitely got a glass half full mentality on the case, especially when he started talking about therapy, which he somehow managed to equate to getting braces.
This can only happen if people "equate the circular economy with making money", claims Tom Szaky of Terracycle, which develops technologies to use hard-to-recycle materials.
While voice pitch may be a sound proxy for figuring out which candidate may have the most testosterone, that doesn't necessarily equate to being a better leader.
It's hard to equate the overall cost of the royal family, as they have many expenditures and the Duke of Edinburgh ain't exactly waving his P0003 around.
Some may have objected to such funding because they equate it with "stimulus spending;" considering it to offer no sustainable benefit and to increase the federal deficit.
Now, seven years after overcoming her disordered eating and no longer buying into cultural norms that equate healthy with slim, she's finally loving herself—and her body.
The financing will be in the form of an all-senior leveraged loan and will equate to around five times Concardis' approximate 55m Ebitda, the sources said.
It makes sense why people equate sweating to working out, but simply sitting and sweating in a sauna or infrared wrap isn't the same thing as exercising.
By conditioning its user base to crave interactive content and equate it with Netflix, the company stands to get an early lead in the coming entertainment reality.
The lender, which is expected to report its fiscal second-quarter results on May 31, said the charge will equate to about 22 Canadian cents a share.
The other companies where workers plan to join the strike are Kuwait Oil Company, Kuwait Oil Tanker company, Equate Petrochemical Industries Company and Kuwait Gulf Oil Company.
Acknowledging our differences and figuring out a way to put them on display is important work, but it does not equate to a Black Lives Matter moment.
Founders building companies in Latin America aren't necessarily as capital-hungry as Silicon Valley-based founders, (where a Series A can now equate to $68 million, apparently).
There is no reason to equate social media and hard drugs like cocaine according to researcher Amy Orben, although such comparisons are often made in media reports.
" A recent memo from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security explained that "a nanosecond error in GPS Time can equate to one foot of position (ranging) error.
He even came up with an adorable little metaphor to equate the hardship of getting defeated in the ring with the hardship of getting convicted of rape.
The basis of the petition's argument lies in false data and unsupportable generalizations that equate the legal hunting of certain giraffe species and populations with illegal poaching.
Heineken's offer values Punch's equity at about 1783 million pounds ($488.95 million) while Emerald's offer would equate to a 410 million pound valuation, according to Reuters calculations.
According to the same person, expenses – including costs paid for the assets and adjusted for tax deductions – equate to around 60 percent of the gross credits earned.
We might equate age with "youthfulness," but what people often mean when they say this is: Don't you wish he were a different sort of person altogether?
The United States can impose all the costs it wants on North Korea, but if Kim continues to equate nuclear weapons with regime survival nothing will change.
Given the growth DeGroote is expecting by 13, Amazon could soon have an $8 billion share in North America, and globally that would equate to $20 billion.
While that sounds far, researchers equate this to the probe sitting on the 4-yard line of a football field and the sun being the end zone.
Although that sounds far, researchers equate this to the probe sitting on the 4-yard line of a football field and the sun being the end zone.
While follower count may or may not equate to influence, there's something to be said for having a niche audience that invests in the influencer they follow.
Ashurkov — who was granted political asylum in the UK last year — finished by saying that any fight for democracy and national security should equate to fighting corruption.
The widely read state-run tabloid is run by the ruling Communist Party's official People's Daily, though its stance does not necessarily equate with Chinese government policy.
The additional cushion at end-1Q17, together with the maximum 60% LTMLV limit in the Pfandbrief Act, would equate to a loan-to-MV threshold of 50%.
Sharing the same last name as the founder however, does not equate to a leadership role; each of RGE's business units is run by a professional CEO.
While some analysts have described official numbers as conservative, the ministry figures would still equate to a decline of around 4.73 million pigs in the national herd.
But a lot of people simply equate them, as Britain's chief rabbi himself did in May 2016, and regard the very idea of anti-Zionism with suspicion.
Those challenging the policy have argued that the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) lacks the authority to equate bump stocks with machine guns.
It was the first Soviet work to equate Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, the two totalitarian regimes that confronted each other as enemies in the war.
The aim is to equate them with terrorists and criminals ready to "infest" — Trump's word — American and European civilization, defined as a threatened white Judeo-Christian preserve.
The article goes on to equate the Russia investigation with Watergate, a scandal that was broken by The Washington Post's dogged investigation of Richard Nixon and others.
Those remarks had prompted intense criticism, including from fellow Republican leaders, for seeming to equate the hate groups and the protesters who turned out to oppose them.
As such, it would be disingenuous to equate carbon emissions from the natural functioning of a freshwater reservoir ecosystem with a coal- or gas-fired power plant.
"It never, ever is justifiable and it doesn't equate to anything that's happened in the United States where we stand up for the free press," he added.
Even many hijabis equate modesty with being shy and introverted, when in fact Islamic teachings encourage all Muslims to physically showcase their culture and their religious pride.
" Steele said that Walters's remarks underscored the Republican Party's tense relationship with race, and that such comments lead Americans to "equate that level of stupidity to conservatism.
Although that sounds far, researchers equate this to the probe sitting on the four-yard line of a football field and the sun being the end zone.
And maybe now with Congresswoman Omar and how that compares to Steve King, it seems like there's almost a conscious effort to equate two very different things.
It would also equate crimes of online defamation that result in death to the far-more serious category of "heinous crimes" — for which bail cannot be granted.
The very fact that the President had the audacity to equate Stonewall to places like Valley Forge and Iwo Jima has earned him the respect of LGBT activists.
Cutting 10 percent of output would equate to about 400,000 tonnes on an annualised basis, Helen Lau, an analyst at Argonaut Securities, wrote in a note on Friday.
"We're all for tax cuts, but let's not equate reform with immediate, unfunded tax cuts," Bank of France Governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau told the conference on Sunday.
So how could he possibly do that and equate that to the grievous loss of life, the worst terrorist attack on American soil in our nation&aposs history.
"Copper is a very slow business in terms of new project development - I always equate it to an oil tanker trying to turn," Macquarie analyst Vivienne Lloyd said.
The bond offering by Equate, a joint venture between Dow Chemical and Kuwait's Petrochemical Industries Company (PIC), has received orders in excess of $2 billion, the document said.
Transactionalism considers anything of value to have acquired it by preference or consent, which threatens to equate value with price and render everything that matters open to trade.
Given Chinese ore is of a considerably lower grade than imported ore, this would probably equate to less than 400 million tonnes on a 62-percent iron basis.
To equate this collision of our physical and digital worlds solely with play and entertainment is to miss one of the great upcoming technological evolutions of our workforce.
Internally, Netflix employees equate working there to playing on a pro sports team: If your impact is not up to snuff, you get replaced by a better player.
I'm there because I choose to be, I can pay for my damn self, and I don't equate a free meal with being respected as a human being.
It's a surface level portrait that some might find satisfying if they think a Tidal subscription and a love of Kanye equate to an understanding of Black culture.
If 3193 million people replaced their iPhone's battery for $29 rather than spending $1,000 on a new iPhone, that would roughly equate to $11 billion in lost revenue.
While support for an inquiry or one's party affiliation does not necessary equate with support for impeachment, it is clear that 51 percent of Trump's map isn't blue.
Bookies say the referendum could be Britain's biggest political betting event, though the amount taken will probably equate only to that staked on a single big football match.
After President Donald Trump seemed to equate the actions of white supremacists and their opponents in Charlottesville earlier this month, dozens of chief executives abandoned his advisory councils.
Last year, Kit Harington pissed off a lot of people when he seemed to equate the sexism that women face on a daily basis to men being objectified.
They have argued that the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) lacks the authority to equate bump stocks with machine guns under decades-old law.
I think it's a bit better now, but I still find that the valuation—especially with the money—doesn't equate the time and energy you put into projects.
Navigating through the heaps of B.S. (quantity does not always equate to quality) to find the true gems may take a helping hand, one we're ready to outreach.
It would be entirely consistent with his orthodoxy for a company to equate taking care of a social responsibility with its best service to its shareholders, he said.
Weight can equate burdens, seriousness, or mass, but it is technically a gravitational force with which Earth pulls a mass; and a mass is the sum of matter.
The goal of these ads is to spread misinformation, to invoke fear, to suggest that women who are trans are really men, to equate trans existence with deviance.
Carney said growth seemed to be slowing to about half its pace of before the referendum, which would equate to around 0.3 percent in quarter-on-quarter terms.
There's something disorienting about that; we've taught ourselves to equate precision cutting and passing with basketball excellence, which casts Durant's postseason bombing runs as something of a rebuttal.
Rather, they've (whether we like it or not) continued to revolutionize the way we shop, learning along the way that being cheaper doesn't necessarily equate to retaining customers.
" In response, Alito, who exclusively uses lowercase-internet fifteen times, chides Kennedy for "musings that seem to equate the entirety of the internet with public streets and parks.
The latter happened because I decided to cover every inch of my body with a sexy combination of SPF 50 Equate Ultra Protection Sunscreen Lotion and bug spray.
Writers such as Norman Mailer, Gay Talese and Tom Wolfe borrowed techniques from fiction to produce compelling, highly personal narratives that did not necessarily equate truth with objectivity.
The scene is a fictional small-time awards ceremony, featuring "the most prestigious verbal abusers on the planet" who seem to equate success with having a pimp's wardrobe.
At the same time, however, Biden's nostalgia for his pragmatic former alliances with segregationist lawmakers bespeaks a foreshortened moral compass, one prone to equate bigotry with collegial rascalry.
I do worry that students today may equate free speech more with cruel or racist posts on Yik Yak than with the civil rights protests of the 1960s.
He dispenses with depth perspective to equate people or manmade objects with the landscape, a unifying vision he had only hinted at in the early drawings and sketches.
The Equate brand, for example, which is comparable to Basic Care, was once owned by Perrigo, and sold in multiple chains, but it is now owned by Walmart.
This is particularly the case for those who wrongly equate diplomacy with negotiations and for those who wrongly argue that the only choice is between negotiation and war.
Does a 22007 percent increase in one area equate to the same number of additional people that would be gained in a 1003 percent increase in another area?
Still, Osterholm warned, even a 1 or 2 percent case fatality rate could equate to a lot of deaths if Covid-19 continues to spread around the world.
The modern economy is not working for too many people, who have begun to equate short-term thinking with free-market capitalism and have had enough of both.
These days, designers making reference to hustlers and showgirls tend to equate the totems of the trade as expressions of self-assurance — a kinky variation on power dressing.
WHAT YOU WANT TO HAVE IS A FINANCIAL SYSTEM THAT'S STRONG ENOUGH TO WITH STAND SUBSTANTIAL SHOCKS AND TO DO THAT YOU NEED ADD EQUATE CAPITAL AND LIQUIDITY.
I mean, some people want to equate it to the streaming wars right now, in terms of the spending on content and the profitability that it will bring.
The widely read state-run Global Times is owned by the ruling Communist Party's official People's Daily, although its stance does not necessarily equate with Chinese government policy.
The congressman is perhaps handsome by the standards of Washington; he is certainly handsome by the standards expressed by Trump, who seems to equate it mostly with bigness.
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.
On the one hand, they want to attribute Black consumption of fried chicken as normative; on the other hand, they want to equate this consumption with something negative.
The widely-read state run Global Times is run by the ruling Communist Party's official People's Daily, although its stance does not necessarily equate with Chinese government policy.
True, the players we're looking at are so talented that to somehow equate their omission from All-Star proceedings as the catalyst for that stardom might seem foolhardy.
But we&aposll see, I mean Mueller&aposs been given a lot of latitude but they are trying to equate what happened in Russia with Mr. Putin and this.
"I could equate my emotional levels to eating clean for 571 days, and then randomly all of a sudden just eating everything that is bad for you," she continues.
Surely this will not be driven by user growth as a 149 percent growth in users would equate to nearly 600 million new users just in the next year.
Industry documents, court testimony, and advertisements all show that the tobacco industry has been working for decades to equate nicotine with innocuous vices like coffee, tea, or gummy bears.
We're not sure we would equate editing a live fireworks show with patriotism, but we certainly don't think the action warranted this level of crazy backlash all over Twitter.
I guess I'm just defending my point to you that being modern doesn't necessarily equate to it being good or original or not related to music from the past.
Some equate the start of summer with the passing of Memorial Day; others know it by the number of fresh cherries populating the produce aisle in the grocery store.
In Turkey, which has been the top jailer of journalists three years in a row, life sentences without parole equate to 30 years in solitary confinement with limited visits.
I was told by the translator that Suda's wording doesn't quite equate into English, but it's the sentiment of not attaching yourself to an idea simply because it's yours.
Presidents in the 18th and 19th centuries also faced scrutiny from an openly partisan press full of rabid muckrakers eager to equate private and public morality for ravenous readers.
The two debate over why Black success has to equate with white success — or if Charley's Black card should be revoked if she doesn't live in a "Black" neighborhood.
While demonstrating empathy is one thing, attempting to equate your own experiences—particularly when they aren't at all relevant to your colleague's situation—will always come off as condescending.
Last week, opposition members walked out of parliament after Interior Minister Nisar Ali Khan said: "You cannot equate banned sectarian organizations with the banned terrorist organizations," local media reported.
Drivers love it, often waiting to sign-on to the platform until surge pricing kicks in, but most passengers hate it and some critics equate it with price gouging.
Booker likes to equate "choice" with "freedom"—even though the entire idea of "choice" was created by white Southerners who were scrambling to defend segregated schools after Brown v.
Following the demonstrations, Trump blamed violence on "both sides" and appeared to equate white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups with the counterprotesters who had turned out to oppose them.
While the screening measures used in the study do not equate to formal diagnoses, she said the findings show FASD is more common in the UK than first thought.
Reglitz also concedes that access itself doesn't automatically equate to broader human rights, as the rampant spread of internet propaganda and the disinformation-fueled genocides in Myanmar make clear.
Try "toadie" or "lackey" or "stool pigeon" or "ass kisser," or "traitor," but maybe don't equate homosexuality with Mike Pompeo carrying water for the murderous regime in Saudi Arabia.
"In many parts of society today, whether in popular culture, academia, the media, or politics, there's a tendency to falsely equate noise with results," Haley said during her speech.
Perry continues to equate fossil fuels with electricity even though Africa and the developing world are now investing more in renewable energy than the richest countries on the planet.
Given the ideology of the Republicans and the far right, this does not equate to a mass shift in consciousness, which would be a necessary prerequisite to any revolution.
Moreover, many experts add, patients have unrealistic expectations: They equate good treatment with the complete eradication of pain and assume they will be handed a prescription for fast relief.
Vice President Pence on Friday called it an "outrage" to equate migrant detention facilities with concentration camps, pushing back on criticism of the crowded facilities at the southern border.
But on Tuesday during an impromptu press conference, he doubled down on his earlier remarks, arguing that "both sides" were responsible and appearing to equate white nationalists and counterprotesters.
We often equate fighting sports to either European or Asian tradition, which ignores the vast history of martial arts across all peoples, even those that were subjugated and victimized.
Yet, Russia cultivates only about 250,2000 acres of vineyards, compared with twice that in Bordeaux alone, he noted, and Russian consumers still equate good wine with France or Italy.
So China is instead promoting "ideology and collective social values" that equate the government with Chinese culture, according to research by the China scholar Heike Holbig and Mr. Gilley.
But more than that, he is a symbol of how the music business works, of how amazing talent doesn't always equate with commercial success, of how madness informs genius.
"There's a lot of people that do equate them with the P.K.K., but I have not seen any indication of that in my dealings with them," said Maj. Gen.
John T. ChisholmDubai, United Arab Emirates To the Editor: Andy Newman perfectly articulates a fear that many travelers lose sleep over: Does travel equate to being a bad person?
For certain members of the superrich, the tactics have been extraordinary — nobody would equate accusations of bribery with helping a college-aged child with homework or a job application.
A lot of founders sort of equate success to the fact that they raised two rounds within six months of each other, and I just took the contrarian view.
Some of the bills equate providing the medical treatments to child abuse, allowing parents to be reported to child welfare agencies and doctors' licenses to be suspended or revoked.
In 2017, BMW Group projected that electrified vehicles — a term that doesn't necessarily equate to fully electric vehicles — would account for 15% to 25% of its sales by 2025.
In an example, they noted that an 8 percent decline in the dollar index by year-end would equate to a 1183 percent gain in 2018 earnings per share.
Just keep in mind that 4-6 of those fun size bars equate to a standard size bar when you doll [sic] out that candy to trick or treaters.
Because the cabins are small and passengers are spending all their time in them, even a tiny amount of the virus in the room could equate to prolonged exposure.
From the United States and Europe to the Arab states, counterterrorism dragnets too often equate any degree of Islam-infused politics with support for Islamic State or Al Qaeda.
In South Bend, there is a mix of amusement and irritation that outsiders would equate the city with the golden dome of Notre Dame and not scenes like these.
If all goes well, the group said, it could be implemented across the I.F.L. "I equate the model to the indoor game itself: It's not for everybody," McCarthy said.
Allowing Huawei to integrate into European 5G networks, Pelosi said, would equate to "having the state police, the Chinese state police, right in your pocket," The Associated Press reported.
That did not translate to big crowds — the Rays finished last in the American League in attendance — but Manfred said it proved that spending does not equate to winning.
There are some nice moments, but overall it feels like a rough attempt to equate getting really good at Pokemon with getting really good at running, football, or chess.
Crow, who was involved with Antifa for almost 30 years, said members use violence as a means of self-defense and they believe property destruction does not equate to violence.
Goldman Sachs and Bank of America Merrill Lynch said last month in separate notes they reckoned full pricing in would equate to an Italy/Germany yield spread of 400 bps.
He called on companies not just to stay within the law but to honour society's more general ethical standards, too; he did not equate shareholder interests with short-term profitability.
Because we've been taught to equate skepticism with sophistication, especially where the media is concerned, entertaining a conspiracy theory can let someone feel both appropriately discerning, and also particularly generous.
" King's College London's Jeremy Jennings, in an introduction to a recent edition of Sorel's Reflections on Violence, writes that Sorel is "prepared to equate [violence] with life, creativity, and virtue.
Pacific Crest is looking for Microsoft to report a $12.2 billion annual revenue run-rate for its commercial cloud business, which would equate to 49 percent year-over-year growth.
By 2025, this would equate to a reduction in China's GDP of nearly $3 trillion annually, the chamber said, citing an analysis by U.S.-based research firm the Rhodium Group.
After the success of Killing Eve and Glow's 2018 return, English Scandal is the latest nugget of proof that longer episodes and longer seasons do not equate to better television.
Google isn't Amazon and most people don't equate it with an online shopping experience, though, so it remains to be seen how many users this new service will actually get.
Paradoxically, because people tend to equate familiarization with truth, the more a lie is called out for being a lie, the more difficult it becomes to parse from the truth.
There are about 1.8 billion Muslims worldwide, and the global Islamic economy with the inclusion of crypto tools, services and products could equate to approximately US$3 trillion by 2021.
Following a violent and deadly white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia earlier this month, Trump faced criticism for seeming to equate hate groups with the counter-protesters who challenged them.
The prosperity gospel is an umbrella term for a group of ideas — popular among charismatic preachers in the evangelical tradition — that equate Christian faith with material, and particularly financial, success.
Kenneth Branagh [who directs and portrays the film's detective, Poirot] shot the film on 16mm; it's got a breadth to it that I equate to a David Lean-style film.
This cultural pressure to think big—to equate size with ambition—is especially burdensome for writers who cannot follow, or choose not to follow, in the footsteps of Great Men.
For an 18-year-old college applicant, a decision between the two college can equate to a difference of some $2.4m in lifetime earnings, or $700,000 in present-value terms.
One concrete metric announced was that Snap generated $5.4 million in "Other" revenue, which would equate to around 41,500 pairs of its Spectacles camera sunglasses at a $130 price point.
"Just the fact that someone is refusing to answer questions or is being otherwise passively noncompliant, absent exigent circumstances, does not equate to a violation of law," the document states.
If this -- i know you can't equate private sector and public sector debt but is there a problem yet in your mind with the amount of debt we're running up?
His words signaled that he continues to equate the assessment of Russian election meddling with efforts to deligitimize his election, even though the US intelligence community made no such assessment.
Corker said he was "disappointed and saddened" that Trump would equate the statements of the intelligence community with the Russian President's and had sharp words for Trump's approach in general.
To equate them with kids in a candy store would be unjust; they were more like kids who'd decided to build a store from candy, using bubble gum as cement.
Off the field, Manning represents the end of an era when we in the news media equate on-field prowess with admirable off-field traits like good character, even heroism.
I also can't help but equate Wall Street with the asshole bros filling lower Manhattan bars most nights, who drink too much, act rudely toward women, and generally behave badly.
Jewish activists accuse some Lithuanians of engaging in historical revisionism by trying to equate the extermination of Jews with the deportations and executions of other Lithuanians during the Soviet occupation.
For them, he said, tapering opioids does not equate with health improvement; on the contrary, he said, some patients contemplate suicide at the prospect of suddenly being plunged into withdrawal.
"I don't think that one should ever equate size in and of itself with a potential threat or harm," said Smith, who also serves as the company's chief legal officer.
Neither the Obama administration then or the Trump administration now has avoided intruding into the important newsgathering role of the press, but it's a big mistake to equate the two.
"There's a concerted effort to equate Warren with Bernie, to make her seem more radical," says Luigi Zingales, a University of Chicago economist and co-host of the podcast Capitalisn't.
He wouldn't classify the long list of false pretenses their relationship began under as coercion, or equate the ways that he tries to "protect" Beck to being abusive and controlling.
But just consider how thoroughly so many of these shows equate misery with authenticity, and how many rely on violence and degradation (usually toward women) to establish character and intensity.
Walmart is a great place to save money on bulk household supplies, and its in-house brand of hand sanitizer, Equate Hand Sanitizer with Aloe, is a great budget buy.
Casting teams as individuals may be a stretch, but let's go ahead and equate the Warriors to Ali, dazzling observers and opponents with speed, style, charisma and Draymond Green's mouth.
"It is true that, as a sector, we make large dollar profits, but that does not necessarily equate to being highly profitable," CFO Peter King told the country's productivity commission.
If "Felix Starro" means to equate those elements with the dashed dreams of immigrants, scammed by a cynical, faith-healing America, it doesn't have the right narrative to get there.
The Pixel 4 XL has a larger battery than the Galaxy Note 10, coming in at 3,700mAh, and that should equate to slightly longer battery life, though not much longer.
Go for practice, see what's out there and be open to the results which may equate to open doors at an even greater situation than the one you're currently in!
Dairy farmers are calling on Congress to stop makers of increasingly popular plant-based alternatives from labeling them yogurt, milk or cheese, saying consumers could mistakenly equate their nutritional profiles.
But if the organization spent approximately $100,73 on an order, and it purchased the copies at the listed price of $30, that would equate to a little under 3,500 copies.
He has also chastised Mr. Trump for a comment in which he seemed to equate the actions of President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia with those of the United States.
The volume quickly moves beyond any "debate" about the merits of BDS, dismantling arguments, for instance, that equate the movement with Anti-Semitism, or with the curtailing of free speech.
However, if you take that route, you'll be paying a lot more than $140 for all the lens upgrades you'd need to make in order to equate to Felix Gray's.
I think to equate at though to say that, in fact, it has anything to do with the President of the United States, is wat too far, you know, a stretch.
And it comes as lawmakers in both parties have pushed back at Trump's comments over the weekend, when he seemed to equate US military actions with violence spawned by Putin's government.
Some research shows that humor gets us hot because it may reveal intelligence, a creative bent, and robust genes that equate to not only good health but also good parenting traits.
The 106 job cuts equate to about 9 percent of company head count, Sacks said, and all of Zenefits' sales and marketing efforts will be relocated from Arizona to San Francisco.
With the objective of highlighting the wide array of franchise concepts that exist in the United States — many people equate franchises with food — we identified 50 different top-performing franchise brands.
Woodman's body was left in the desert by "the Caliphate soldiers", Al-Naba said, though it put a date on Woodman's execution using the Islamic calendar that would equate to Jan.
Astrologer Bob Marks writes that this type of second house may have an effect on one's dating life, too, as it can lead those with it to equate gifts with affection.
"Increased investment in brand and international expansion is likely to equate to a reduction in our 2018 EBITDA forecast of circa 20 million pounds, or 4 percent," wrote Davy Research analysts.
The changing of the seasons might equate with PSLs, sweater weather, and #spoopy Halloween decor for some, but for others, it's an indicator that the bonkers sales week isn't far offer.
If successful, the service would not only give Amazon data on what outfits customers prefer, but it also would help shoppers equate Amazon with fashion - a lucrative market for online retailers.
Buzz: Ocasio-Cortez also responded to ongoing GOP criticisms on the Green New Deal, as they call it a socialist resolution and equate it to getting rid of cows and airplanes.
"The hourly differences between a clean energy economy occupation and one elsewhere in the economy can equate to a raise between 8 and 19 percent, if not more," the study states.
It does seem like a good sign that Amazon is listening to the millions of people who are buying and using its devices, which many privacy experts equate to wiretapping devices.
One of the underlying principles of AA is identifying there is a greater power over your drinking -- many equate this with religion, but for Rachel, that greater power is the group.
Republicans say the "too big to fail" label protects firms with a liquidation process they equate to the 2009 bank bailout, though the liquidation process doesn't give failing firms taxpayer money.
Luckily, for people who equate interesting fashion with good fashion, the first awards ceremony of the circuit is the Golden Globes, which is known for having a notoriously bold red carpet.
"To take something that happened in history where millions of Jews had died, and equate it to somewhere that's happening on the border, she owes this nation an apology," he said.
It is not, however, rational to wage war against a major source of energy without an alternative, nor is it honest to equate reason and reality with disregard for the planet.
"I really equate Push Pin to the Beatles," said Steven Heller, a co-chairman of design at the School of Visual Arts and former art director at The New York Times.
In recent speeches, including his State of the Union address and again this week in Florida, a key 2020 battleground, Trump used the crisis in Venezuela to equate Democrats with socialists.
The watchdog ruled that while alcohol was not directly shown in the advert, viewers would equate the gregarious Captain Morgan figure with the rum itself, and therefore a boost in confidence.
Public health efforts should challenge government guidelines that equate fruit juice with whole fruit, because these guidelines most likely fuel the false perception that drinking fruit juice is good for health.
There are many reasons for this, but the main reason is that conservative jurists tend to equate the Court's political standing — its prestige and legitimacy — with the rule of law itself.
Biden told the autoworker he supports the 2nd Amendment and owns many guns himself, but points out that gun rights don't equate to owning any weapon you want ... like assault rifles.
Several Republicans have been attempting to equate those efforts with the systematic, top-down intervention by Russia in 2016 — a campaign longtime observers determined Ukraine would be incapable of carrying out.
And no offense to Peter, but four windmill sex sessions and a decent camera presence doesn't necessarily equate to a season full of fireworks and more than Mike's fans' campaigns do.
That would equate to 274 billion of his proposed total budget of 1.095 trillion euros - an increase from the 2014-20 budget, in which 20% of spending was earmarked for climate.
Even the bank's "more cautious" global demand growth forecast of 1.5% this year, down from 3.7% in 2018, will equate to a copper market deficit of about 90,33 tonnes, it added.
His goal is to create a machine that can tunnel through the earth faster than his pet snail Gary, which would equate to more than 10 times speedier than current technology.
" The CBP spokesperson said CBP "strongly disagrees" with the characterizations in the letters, saying "the alleged incidents do not equate to what we know to be common practice at our facilities.
Determining whether an area represents a human face or a volleyball does not equate to "facial recognition," and Magisto neither collects nor retains any facial information capable of recognizing an individual.
Trump received intense bipartisan criticism after failing to name and disavow the racist groups in his initial statement, and for appearing to equate those people with counterprotesters who also showed up.
"Maybe if we start using language that elevates women and doesn't equate them with sweet, small, cuddly, tender things, we'll start treating them as more than that as well," she said.
The roughly 3 billion barrels of oil in storage across the world's richest nations equate to around a month of demand and this cushion has insulated investors from disruption to supply.
The House Freedom Caucus, a group of several dozen Republicans who equate any sort of compromise with capitulation, have repeatedly hijacked the legislative process -- to loud cheers from the GOP base.
If Cohen's attorneys are successful and manage to obtain a sentence of time served, the result would equate to a 99.5% lower sentence than the recommendation from the US Sentencing Commission.
Challenges to that order — diversity, influx of outsiders, breakdown of the old order — are experienced as personally threatening because they risk upending the status quo order they equate with basic security.
"People who are attaching sex to these stories seem to equate the genitals with sex, but that's not how young children see their genitals," Kinsey Institute writer Debby Herbenick told Jezebel.
I would equate writing this book with remembering how good it feels to really look at a sunrise or watch a bee in a flower or roll around in fresh-cut grass.
A lot of people equate democracy with liberal democracy or democracy with political outcomes that most of us find agreeable — support for minority rights, rule of law, political equality, tolerance of dissent.
Since each options contract accounts for 100 shares, those puts equate to around $21 million in premium spent that the SPY S&P 500 ETF would fall below $235 by February expiration.
It was a week of outrage as the media tried to equate Barr with Trump and his supporters , but avoided equating the vehemently anti-Trump Bee with Democrats and other Trump opponents.
No wonder Christie and other Republicans pounded away at the minor skirmish the United States had with Iran, trying to equate it with the hostage crisis which undid Jimmy Carter's political career.
"I equate the impact of building a wall to building a wall over your parents' graves or your family graveyard," Tohono O'odham Nation Tribal Chairman Ned Norris Jr. said at the time.
"Right or wrong, some equate BLM's law enforcement operations to the Gestapo of the World War II era," is how Utah's Garfield County Commissioner Leland Pollock put it to Congress in July.
Cuba also released Alan Gross, an American contractor accused of spying, but the administration insisted that was not part of the deal because it did not want to equate him with spies.
Editorial The Supreme Court has ruled repeatedly over the last decade that it is morally and constitutionally wrong to equate offenses committed by emotionally undeveloped adolescents with crimes carried out by adults.
They equate to the three brands upon which the company plans to build its future: Michael Kors itself, Versace and Jimmy Choo, an upscale shoemaker that it bought for $1.35bn in 2017.
Decades of inbreeding has led to numerous genetic problems in purebred dogs—from dislocated hips in German Shepards to severe breathing issues in bulldogs—which equate to years of ongoing veterinary expenses.
"Such warnings would equate to compelled false speech, directly violate the First Amendment, and generate unwarranted public concern and confusion," Scott Partridge, Monsanto's vice president of global strategy, said in a statement.
This is because too many of us equate sports betting to playing roulette (a game of luck), when in reality, it's much more like investing in a stock (a game of skill).
While some people might equate the lack of R-rated material with a lower quality of the shows Apple is picking up, let's remember that network TV isn't exactly basic or boring.
With the film running at 97 minutes (1.6 hours), if all of the users watched the whole film that would equate to about 50 million hours worth of video that was watched.
David Eastman sponsored a bill in May that would legally equate abortion with "death of a child" and make it punishable by up to 99 years in prison and a $500,000 fine.
Today, many equate startups and entrepreneurship with the lean, public development process that enabled Mark Zuckerberg to create in a dorm room the most powerful media company the world has ever known.
Philippine defense ministry spokesman, Arsenio Andolong, said it was "unfair to equate internal security operations in general with human rights violations" or to cast judgment on the military when allegations were unverified.
A 2016 interview in the Las Vegas Review-Journal with Ed Mintz, the firm's founder, clarifies what the letter grades generally equate to for a new movie's overall quality and business outlook.
Challenges to that order — diversity, influx of outsiders, breakdown of the old order — are experienced as personally threatening because they risk upending the status quo order that authoritarians equate with basic security.
But watching Kanye wrestle with an idea—even one so seemingly obvious as forcibly separating children from their parents at the border doesn't equate to "love"—is not just satisfying but necessary.
So when you press the button and your time comes up, we will equate that time to some distance around the earth, to some distance inside of IEX as an internal process.
Trump, during a 2017 news conference following violence at a white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, attempted to equate white supremacists on one side with the "alt-left" on the other side.
Steve King said he believed a failure for Trump to make his campaign promises a reality would undermine his reelection chances, and said border security alone did not equate to a wall.
Pope Francis last year urged an end to what he called a genocide against Christians in the Middle East, but he has also said it is wrong to equate Islam with violence.
Increased prosecutions under these laws, which equate control of women as being authentically Islamic and doggedly anti-Western, will destroy the legal and political progress Pakistani women have made in recent years.
Equate issued its debut conventional bonds in November last year, raising a total of $2.25 billion split into a long five-year bond maturing in March 2022 and a 10-year tranche.
I think what distinguishes Carnwath's diaristic works from those of others working in this vein is that her observations don't seem rooted in an "I" that we can equate with the artist.
The additional Australian renewables equate to 250 watts per person a year, compared with about 50 watts per person for the European Union, Japan, China and the United States, the study said.
The tiny Southeast Asian state, a global trading hub and financial center, is seen as a bellwether for the global economy because its exports equate to around 200 percent of its output.
A cut from the current corporate tax rate of 35 percent down to 25 percent would boost earnings by more than $10, which would equate to another 150 points on the index.
Some of Mr Trump's defenders have tried to equate these isolated, individual statements of preference with Russia's extensive, covert meddling in the 2016 election, but the two things are not remotely similar.
Still, Republican lawmakers have increasingly attempted to equate the actions of the two countries even though no intelligence community report has ever accused Ukraine of interfering in the election, sources tell CNN.
Some responded that many of the FINRA-mandated disclosures do not necessarily equate to misconduct by brokers, such as when a firm pays a client to settle a complaint without admitting wrongdoing.

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