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Telephone intercepts can be obtained by an officer more or less the equivalent of a police superintendent in Sweden.
"The Canterbury Tales are more or less the equivalent of the complete works of Shakespeare," said Professor Cooper.
But the French dictionary Le Robert, more or less the equivalent of our O.E.D., classes what we see as aimlessness as one of the arts de vivre.
Printed materials from colleges are more or less the equivalent of the glossy brochures prepared by car manufacturers, in which every vehicle is powerful, efficient and gorgeous.
The photographs (many of them taken on a Vest Pocket Kodak, more or less the equivalent of a modern disposable camera) are starkly beautiful.
Cicero had been tipped off by his undercover agents, intelligence reports and intercept evidence, and so – displaying a breastplate under his toga (more or less the equivalent of turning up at the House of Commons with a bulletproof vest and pistol) – he denounced Catiline who quickly fled, and he rounded up the other conspirators.
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Poverty has fallen, but an estimated 63% of Rwandans continue to live on less than the equivalent of $1.25 a day and 82% on less than $2.
Nine out of 10 companies paid less than the equivalent of 5percentt of their total income.
For less than the equivalent of 50 cents the man hands out bags of pakoras and crisp vegetarian samosas.
By her calculations, people earning less than the equivalent of $75,000 find it difficult to buy anywhere in central London.
Uniquely in Asia, Pakistan had seen a slight rise in the number of people living on less than the equivalent of a dollar a day.
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