Sentence examples for become equated with from inspiring English sources

The phrase "become equated with" is a correct and usable part of a sentence in written English
It is typically used to describe a situation where one thing or concept is linked or associated with another. Here is an example sentence: "In the past decade, social media platforms have become equated with instant gratification and constant validation, leading to an increase in anxiety and self-esteem issues among young adults."

Exact(11)

Most Alabamians are tired of being tied to an unlovely, unjust past, but an election year is a tough time to talk about real change in a state where a word like "tax" has somehow become equated with sin.

How did the religious liberty clauses of the First Amendment, barring Congress from making any law "respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof," become equated with language that appears nowhere in the Constitution: "separation of church and state"?

Unlike the holy virgin, la Malinche has become equated with being a sex object or "whore" who slept with Cortés and betrayed her own people.

Since then, it has been more important to be seen to be doing the right thing than to be encouraging excellence, which somehow has become equated with elitism.

When applied to mitochondrial transfer, this term shows how strongly personhood has become equated with genetics, and indicates to geneticists that they have some work to do to move the public on from the strictly deterministic rhetoric around genetics.

I suspect the entire category of "art depicting children" has become equated with "sentimental art".

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Similar(49)

Speech is often equated with action; oversensitivity and insensitivity can start to look much the same.

Lastly, workers were defined by various occupations in the NESRAC not equated with the above categories.

"Only in trials is making it pretty equated with making it up".

Time to oneself is sooner equated with unemployment and laziness, certainly in countries where the wealth gap has widened.

That makes for madness in a sport where losing has been likened, though not yet quite equated, with death.

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