Sentence examples for some sort of equivalent from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

His intention wasn't to create some sort of equivalent to those books on network TV, but to borrow from their spirit.

Giorgio Vallortigara, a neuroscientist at the University of Trento said: "It is an interesting study that provides some empirical support to the idea, quite widespread among dog owners, that these animals possess some sort of equivalent of jealousy behaviour".

Surely we at least have some sort of equivalent instinct to keep our population at a sustainable level.

Similar(57)

Giving everything is what Milner does and always has, which is still not enough for those who see him, especially at international level, as some sort of footballing equivalent of the medium-paced trundler.

Speaking on BBC Radio 5 Live on Thursday, Buerk said: "If I gave the impression that the two issues of her being drunk and the rape for which Ched Evans was convicted were some sort of moral equivalent, that would be terrible and something I would need to apologise for.

Most people think climate change is an interesting topic for a seminar or lecture, not an ongoing worldwide emergency, and we need some sort of visual equivalent of yelling "fire" in a crowded theater.

Not unlike watching a large lady in a tight dress, you'll listen to this over and over waiting for some sort of audio equivalent of a booby to fall out of the chaotic murk so you can smile the smile of someone who's witnessed a great moment in time all to themselves.

I was fascinated to talk about these differences, hoping maybe there was some sort of gender-equivalent of the "greenfield advantages" emerging markets face over the developed world.

I wasn't diving to be able to blow my gills wide," by which, I think, he meant some sort of sea-creature equivalent of self-aggrandizement. "I was diving to draw attention to the history of that place.

In an ever richer China greater action on sulphur seems all but inevitable, and some sort of air-pollution equivalent of 2008's tainted-milk crisis might bring it about precipitously.

First, supposing that all genomes have had both alleles until very recently and then they in some sort of mysterious genomic equivalent of quantum entanglement have lost one or the other, more or less at random.

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