For the grey-haired, being young is often equated with being hot-headed, turbulent, self-willed, obstinate, and too hot to handle. |
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For almost all northern Europeans, national identity continues to be wrapped up in, and equated with, ethnic background. |
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It is equated with drink-driving, and the motoring organisations are not doing enough to restore a more balanced view. |
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Here, insomuch as music is equated with time, it is suffused with dimension through presence. |
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They therefore identified the medial, proximal tarsal bone of Diadectes as the intermedium and equated it with the reptilian astragalus. |
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Complexity in colonial organisms is often equated with the degree of integration in polymorphs. |
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Potato gnocchi, a pasta I have always equated with sugarless cookie dough, is sultry and tender in brown butter and sage. |
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All proceeded from a premise that equated modernization with Westernization. |
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Greeks like Aristotle, who opposed atomism, equated it with a blind desire to abnegate the governance of Nature in favour of pure chance. |
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Thus, if realty stands to be equated with money, the many and complex considerations which affect its value necessitate consideration. |
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Justice is not to be equated with the law of the state or with simple majoritarian democracy. |
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In Hollywood, Friedman believes, it is cool to be open to different sexualities and races because personal difference is equated with creativity. |
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Motherlessness in my situation was far too closely equated with lovelessness. |
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Yin Xi guessed the sound equated somewhat to a harrumph of dissatisfaction. |
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He reinforced an Australian cultural stereotype which equated intellectualism with sexual deviance. |
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The three types of cones are often, and somewhat misleadingly, equated with Maxwell's additive primaries of red, blue, and green. |
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Many are having great difficulties keeping their dignity in a culture where redundancy is still equated with incompetence and laziness. |
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Use of these drugs is routinely equated with socially degraded status and participation in activities indicative of the code of the streets. |
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The application of useful machines and tools was thus equated with not just material progress but cultural development. |
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The show is a chilling indictment of what happens when sanity is equated with conformity. |
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Blindness is equated with turning away from temporality towards the contemplation of eternity. |
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Many others have written about New Zealand history as though the steady march forward by the State equated with progress. |
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How wonderful it would be if all theoretical conclusion equated with the practical reality. |
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Therefore, ethical action is equated with following rules, principles, laws, maxims, and codes. |
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Worn without stays or hoops, this see-through dress was instantly popular, though some matrons equated it with loose morality. |
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Perhaps he was talking of a Hindu song, reflecting a Hindu ethos in which the country is equated with the mother goddess. |
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She holds that the separation of church and state is also unconstitutional and has equated Social Security with cannibalism. |
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In such an atmosphere, it is inevitable that dissent will be equated with disloyalty and that the line between the two will be blurred. |
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Adulthood is being equated with unimaginativeness, as if childhood is the only realm of the imagination. |
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Thus, a secret theft of presidential documents was equated with the public disclosure of needful information. |
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The key point to remember is that biological altruism cannot be equated with altruism in the everyday vernacular sense. |
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However, this is not to be equated with genuine globalization in the economic sphere, and the extent of this has been exaggerated. |
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I find it sad that our notions of fun are equated with destruction and violence, and not creation and sustenance. |
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Sometimes, this point of view is equated with, or momentarily coincides with the Eye of the Camera. |
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A society fears its deserters more than its enemies, and in its mind intelligence is too often equated with leftism. |
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It also makes it possible to free up resources quickly and can be equated with general budget support. |
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Academic science has shown that the notion that objectivity can be equated with masculinity is a myth. |
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The presence of E. coli is associated with bather-associated illness, but its absence cannot be equated with the lack of risk of illness. |
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In the past, Indian energy planners have equated rural electrification with village electrification. |
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Popularity need not be equated with the destruction of intellectual values and, by the same token, accessibility need not threaten traditional archival and custodial roles. |
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From that point of view, and from many others as well, they are distinct from reservations and cannot simply be equated with them. |
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Analyses during early stages of the process could therefore not be equated to actual intake. |
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For one thing, autonomist demands, as legitimate as they may be, cannot automatically be equated with a secessionist agenda. |
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In my own fevered imagination, I have always equated stakeholders with Count Dracula. |
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He equated this response with altered activity of the autonomic nervous system. |
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A TRS of 2 was equated to Above Average rating reflecting the infrequency of errors that have marginal effect on data quality. |
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Mounted in metal lockets and protected by glass coverings, they were equated with jewellery and worn as precious, personal mementos. |
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In general, however, in India as in Britain, policy equated opium with alcoholic spirits, whose consumption should be regulated but not prohibited. |
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But a notion of secularism that is equated with atheism, Europeanisation and an absolute notion of freedom cannot be accommodated with religious societies either. |
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Breadth of a claim is not to be equated with indefiniteness. |
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I would also confront many stereotypes about suicide, a word that means self-murder, an act that some religious faiths once equated with eternal banishment from heaven. |
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It is more difficult to grasp because it cannot be equated with, or reduced to, the kind of power exercised by States. |
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Here we see Heidegger critically pointing the finger at Nietzsche for his radical individualism, which equated freedom with a solitude that denied our worldly contextuality. |
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In all this he equated crowds with the working and lower classes. |
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However, legitimate struggles for self-determination could not be equated with terrorism. |
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He has also equated cyberthreats with nuclear and biological weapons. |
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Passion, talent and genuine desire to make a difference inspire many but on the consumerist merry-go-round some of us ride, success is often equated with a fat pay cheque. |
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Generally, less structure seems to be equated with more subjective, except in the domain of discourse markers, where the more one has the more subjective things get! |
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Arts education is undervalued, equated with leisure time, seen as unimportant and often viewed as a waste of time. |
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In many parts of the media hip-hop is often portrayed with constantly recurring stereotypes and is equated with violence. |
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What is put on stage and managed and ordered and sequenced is merely creative manifestations of culture and is not to be equated with culture itself. |
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Similarly, we caution that ICTs should not be exclusively equated with connectivity and use of the Internet. |
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The reflection she sees is slimmer and more beautiful, thus her ego is equated to the potent drug. |
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Most of these cultural requisites may be equated with cultural rights, which are enablers of capacities. |
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In medieval bestiaries the whale mistaken for an island is usually equated with the devil, who lures the unwary from the safety of their ship, the church. |
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Vaillant began with the old Eriksonian model, in which maturation is equated with a deepening capacity for love and work. |
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It is therefore reasonable to conclude that the benefit to Hynix equated to the full amount by which its debt was reduced. |
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Life as a whole when equated with, man relieves himself from the suffering of self-circumscription. |
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And it was Rick Lazio who equated her, despite all these testimonials on her behalf, with these people who obviously have invented something for political gain. |
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Nor could their hurt be equated with the kind of traumatic lengthy bullying suffered in harassment or discrimination cases. |
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Trim design equated to up to 40 stages of pressure letdown, keeping extreme velocities and fluid turbulence to a minimum. |
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Rather ingeniously he equated such demands with Labour's call for stimulus spending. |
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Economists, bankers, and executives equated ad men with sideshow barkers, while scientists considered psychologists no better than fortune-tellers. |
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Looking back, I know that my initially very tough style of management equated to a certain kind of self-preservation. |
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Thursday's record of 18 MPs ejected in 73 minutes equated to one MP every four minutes. |
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It must be emphasized, nonetheless, that fair compensation in the present context is not equated with the price of a fee simple. |
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It has been both unfortunate and unfair for HIV infection to be considered a shameful disease, for people living with HIV to be judged as blameworthy, and for AIDS to be equated with certain death. |
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As demonstrated in this excerpt from a political pamphlet, urban growth was equated with urban progress, both of which were a source of civic pride and were widely flaunted. |
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Happiness or success is equated with conspicuous consumption. |
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Accordingly, it initially equated enemy centers of gravity with key vulnerabilities. |
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Non-violence is too often mistakenly equated with passivity, and spirituality seen as a luxury only people far removed from the suffering of armed conflict can enjoy. |
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Once a brand to be equated with meticulous, intelligent and craftsmanlike theatre, its standards have plunged disastrously. |
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Last year that equated to 33 deaths more than expected there, although it is not possible to say how many of these deaths could have been prevented. |
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Shorten said the government's decision to walk away from the Gonski review-inspired reforms after four years equated to billions of dollars for schools. |
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French officials saw themselves as rulers and equated power with coercion. |
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As a general rule, one would see any mean of 4.00 or better as indicating the strong presence of this characteristic and therefore can be equated with success. |
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He noted that even though there was no legal instrument defining mercenary activities, that paragraph automatically equated the activities of private military and security companies and those of mercenaries. |
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Worryingly, empowerment in the Summit discussions appears to become equated with access to health education and children's education as a 'credit plus' activity. |
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Scholars have sometimes wrongly equated data about the arrests of various victims with fatalities, particularly in the case of non-Jewish victims. |
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And, although offenders are generally required to admit responsibility for their actions, this admission is generally not equated to a finding of guilt as in a criminal court. |
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In the United States, suffrage is equated to citizenship and citizenship defines membership, decision-making authority, and deservingness. |
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More out there are wiggy, from the expression to flip one's wig, and dotty, from doting too much, in an epoch when fond was equated with foolish. |
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Michael, as well as Santiago and San Hipolito, Mesoamericans were presented as victorious over a system equated with their past traditions. |
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This is particularly true in the area of medical technology, where being anti-technology is equated with being anti-health and anti-cure. |
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The older idea that informationlessness was to be equated with uniform distributions is vulnerable to the transformational paradoxes. |
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Specific structural requirements are equated to constructing the perfect mouse trap for catching targeted prey. |
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Atsuko Ichijo argues that national identity cannot be equated with a movement for independence. |
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Some peoples in Britain were also called Belgae and O'Rahilly equated them with the Fir Bolg in Ireland. |
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Neither the Russian Empire, nor the Soviet Union ever had an organised force that could be equated to a militia. |
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Dahn equated Chararic with Theodemir, even saying that the latter was the name he took upon baptism. |
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In various times Mongolic peoples have been equated with the Scythians, the Magog and the Tungusic peoples. |
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However, the concepts of those keystone texts cannot be equated with Taoism as a whole. |
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Schreier suggests that cynicism cannot be equated with quietism, nihilism, selfishness, or false consciousness. |
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For some churches, faith is equated with nationalism. |
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Cistercians equated spiritual health with economic achievement and environmental exploitation. |
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A Dutch study found that cycling can extend lifespans by up to 14 months, but the risks equated to a reduced lifespan of 40 days or less. |
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Britain's earliest topographers often equated moorland with the sea: the rolling, treeless hills that resemble waves, the exposure and isolation and sense of imperilment. |
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He fled to the United States, where he was driven out again in the McCarthy era, when anti-fascism was equated with Communism. |
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This was further enhanced in 1976 by the U. S. Supreme Court's decision, which unethically equated money spent on politics with political speech, making laws that limit campaign contributions unconstitutional. |
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This appears to have taken on great psychological significance later in Picasso's life for he equated it with patricide, a killing of his father's creativity. |
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Virtue in a woman was equated with industriousness and was measured by the amount and quality of tipi covers, garments and moccasins she produced. |
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He professed to admire the student who defended his low college grades by telling his father he was just dumb, and so-called dumbness took on a moral quality for Vonnegut, to be equated with sincerity and decent ordinariness. |
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Within this framework, progress is equated with technological invention and capitalist enterprise, industrial development, economic growth, and the expansion and integration of markets. |
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If we truly agree that enlargements can be equated to success, then the question arises as to why we would want to add thirty clauses based on a philosophy not far removed from narrow-minded, gutless Euroscepticism. |
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For students in Professor Michael Maloney's psychology and sociology classes this spring, that service equated into bear hugs for young hospital patients. |
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Pirates are often equated in the modern mind with privateers and buccaneers, but neither label accurately describes piracy during the early eighteenth century. |
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For some, prior schooling is equated with status, cultured, civilized, high class, and they may experience shame among peers in their new ESL classes. |
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The Hudood Ordinances promulgated in 1979 equated rape with adultery. |
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Occupying the middle of the continuum, ostrichism can occur under the guise of several other approaches.This stance ought not to be equated with ostrichism. |
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Assuming fixed disutilities of work intensity and hours, utility is expressed asthat is, the average marginal product, and marginal disutilities of effort are equated. |
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In economics, accounting and Marxian economics, capital accumulation is often equated with investment of profit income or savings, especially in real capital goods. |
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