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Employers may equate your excess weight with a lazy lifestyle.
But others swap services for summer fun or road trips, and some families with children may equate vacation from school with vacation from church.
And while more stations may equate to more listener choice (or at least several more variations of radio beige), the cannibalisation of audiences in recent years has failed to either raise the quality threshold or generate proportionally more revenue.
That could be because disclosure has only just started, the information is often difficult to extract, and many patients may equate higher prices with better quality care or don't care about price because they are well insured.
Perhaps to Mr Blair, they are the problem, people who may equate "ambition" with greed.
This may equate to improved frequency specific perception and control over amplitude when using future cochlear implant devices.
Similar(29)
The two may not equate and time spent on quality may not necessarily be well spent.
In addition, it is possible that the most preferred communication modalities may be perceived as familiar and convenient, which may not equate to efficacy.
For example memory deficit may not equate with a diagnosis of dementia, while hearing loss may be due to wax in the external auditory meatus rather than a medical diagnosis of deafness.
Amid the trial of former Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich, we may reflexively equate government with skulduggery.
Be advised, however, that many may now equate it with a Garden of Eden, complete with apple and talking snake.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com