Sentence examples for the equivalent thereof from inspiring English sources

Exact(7)

Parts of it are well used: some seating, including in the changing booths, is burlap-wrapped bales of cotton (or the equivalent thereof) — a touch of rural whimsy.

They go to a lot of trouble to create a magnificent alternate world, a world you want to explore and learn more about, and then they bore you to death with a lot of "action," i.e., fights and car chases or the equivalent thereof.

If they want to serve 20,000 people at a time, they'll need 20,000 computers or the equivalent thereof.

Although these early devices were comparatively simple and contained relatively few gates (or the equivalent thereof) by today's standards, many aspects of their underlying architecture are still employed to this day.

Meanwhile if you go and visit Hunchun City Hall, or the equivalent thereof in a new development just on the outskirts of town, you will see a dazzling room-sized, Bond-villain style facsimile model of a future development, little lights all a-blinking along miles of orderly toy-sized highrises.

The European Union donated about $3.8 million to the country, and various countries sent about $1.8 million in cash or the equivalent thereof in relief items.

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Similar(51)

While I wouldn't say it's "common," more than a few women have poked holes in their diaphragm (or the contraceptive equivalent thereof) in the hope that their partner would soften when there was a live little person tugging at his sleeve.

The amendment, all of 21 words long, defined "persons" as "every human being from the moment of fertilization, cloning or the functional equivalent thereof".

Mississippians, by a margin of fifty-eight to forty-two per cent, said no to amending their state constitution to redefine personhood as "every human being from the moment of fertilization, cloning or the functional equivalent thereof".

Yesterday, Mississippi's voters, to my surprise, rejected the personhood measure, which would have amended the state's constitution to define a person as "every human being from the moment of fertilization, cloning or the functional equivalent thereof".

The Mississippi amendment aims to sidestep existing legal battles, simply stating that "the term 'person' or 'persons' shall include every human being from the moment of fertilization, cloning or the functional equivalent thereof".

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