Sentence examples for equivalent made from inspiring English sources

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Exact(6)

Still, there's little comparison between wood knitting needles fanning out eight yards wide like some petrified sea urchin, as they do on the old warping machine, and its computerized equivalent made of aluminum and shrouded in a green plastic hood.

As The Lede explained last year, Mr. Ahmadinejad had, in fact, used a metaphorical turn of phrase in Persian that has no exact English equivalent, made no mention of a map, and might have intended his comment to be more of a prediction than a threat.

As a benefit, motes have an IPv6 address, or an equivalent made of the network identifier and a small address, and can communicate directly with the Internet.

Ford estimates that a 3D-printed spoiler could be less than half the weight of the equivalent made from a metal casting, for instance, so you can extrapolate that a car where many of its external body pieces are 3D-printed could enjoy greatly decreased weight overall, and better fuel efficiency as a result.

The control plants were grown under identical conditions as the plants used in the extract treatment, except they received an equal volume of methanol (100 μl/g equivalent), made up with distilled water, but without the LPC.

Extract treatments were administered 48 h prior to freezing treatment by irrigating with 1.0 g L-1 of ANE or LPC (1.0 g L-1 equivalent made up with sterile distilled water) at the rate of 20 ml per plant.

Similar(54)

The closest has been the TV equivalent Making a Murderer.

Rosneft produces some 2.4 million barrels of oil equivalent, making it the country's top producer, and has annual pretax profit of about $8.5 billion.

MARINA ROSENFELD: As a historical phenomenon, ambivalence about releasing recordings — not to mention also making them, listening to them, collecting them, none of which is strictly equivalent makes a different kind of sense than it ever could today.

Others claim that group selection and its alternatives are equivalent, making it a matter of preference which to employ.

Meryl Salzinger's solarized silver prints of cloud formations are like negative versions of Alfred Stieglitz's "Equivalents," made nearly a century ago.

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