The U.S. Food and Drug Administration considers genetically modified foods equivalent to unmodified foods. |
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The idea that a walk-through might present an experience equivalent to actually being inside a building is wishful thinking indeed. |
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In the billions of years since, they have cooled to less than three degrees Kelvin above absolute zero, equivalent to microwave frequencies. |
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That change is equivalent to the piston movement in a car's engine which ultimately drives the wheels round. |
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For that to be possible, gravity and acceleration must be exactly equivalent to one another. |
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In some career management fields, a master gunner's role would be equivalent to a warrant officer. |
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The Bequerel is a unit of radioactivity, which is equivalent to the number of radioactive particles detected per second. |
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Annual capacity would be 200,000 tonnes, equivalent to 1.7 million barrels or 1.97 million hectolitres of beer. |
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In French meat cookery, jus is roughly equivalent to honestly made thin gravy in the British tradition. |
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Fuel economy, emissions ratings and performance are equivalent to the standard wheelbase XJ saloons. |
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Total supply chain cost for the unit is said to be equivalent to the price of a quality aftermarket booster seat. |
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Each year is still equivalent to the sidereal period of the Earth, one revolution around the Sun. |
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These records are equivalent to the till receipts you are given when shopping in the physical world. |
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Their opinion is no more valid than it would be if they declared pounds henceforth equivalent to kilograms. |
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The leaves are long and smooth and travel up the entire stem, equivalent to alfalfa. |
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By the Recorded Delivery Service Act 1962 a letter sent by recorded delivery is equivalent to a registered letter. |
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The question of whether your position is meaningful is pretty much equivalent to what I meant by true, yah. |
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Most of the houses are two storeys and would be equivalent to a medium to large sized Queensland home. |
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One meter is equivalent to 1.09 yards and one inch is equivalent to 2.54 centimeters. |
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Here, rescaling the rotational velocity is equivalent to stretching the time domain. |
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Out in the Australian wilderness and the wide-open spaces, the only equivalent to a fox hunt that I can think of is a kangaroo shoot. |
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A pound of baking soda yields 10.6 ounces of anhydrous sodium carbonate, which is equivalent to 12.4 ounces of monohydrated sodium carbonate. |
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This is equivalent to resubmitting a task with the addition that initial input data can be different from the original task. |
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Therefore, my social interaction had severely declined, leaving me the equivalent to a social leper. |
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That's equivalent to reading an automobile license plate from 100 kilometers away. |
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Both stress measures yielded results that were equivalent to the original model. |
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The recognition that Thomas is fundamentally an Aristotelian is not equivalent to the claim that Aristotle is the only influence on him. |
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Although the country has a defence budget broadly equivalent to that of Switzerland, there are 1.35 million people under arms. |
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The health status of Greek citizens is roughly equivalent to that of Western Europe. |
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The script, he says, is approximately 800-1000 pages long, the equivalent to eight to ten hours of dialogue. |
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That is equivalent to the same life reduction you would expect from smoking. |
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Every parent who wants one is given a voucher equivalent to the money that would be spent on educating his or her child. |
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This Mr Whitton presents to us as roughly equivalent to St Francis giving his possessions to the poor. |
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That is equivalent to the admission requirements of some Oxford and Cambridge colleges. |
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It seems somewhat equivalent to winning the midweek and weekend Lottery in the same week. |
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Additionally, the effect of watching fish was determined to be equivalent to the effect of hypnosis. |
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The income was equivalent to a two per cent council tax hike, Coun Galloway said. |
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An hour of walking in a pair of these trainers or sandals is apparently equivalent to three hours of hard exercise at the gym. |
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The shortfall next year alone would be equivalent to 4p on the basic rate of income tax. |
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If other countries invade Syria, would that be in any way equivalent to Poland? |
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They are being asked to donate funds equivalent to a food or drink item from their establishment. |
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The effect is equivalent to always rejecting the face-up card that is passed to you. |
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When he reaches the top of that he shadow boxes, all the while wearing a burden equivalent to a quarter of his own body weight. |
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Asking any other sector to give us a viable price for our produce is equivalent to begging. |
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Each day, the race is the equivalent to running six continuous marathons with only nine litres of water. |
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The other one is sand sole which I suppose is equivalent to a flounder here. |
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A two-week holiday in school time is equivalent to nearly half a day a week of teaching for two terms. |
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This is equivalent to three bin bags of rubbish per household of four or less people. |
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Should I set out on such a journey, equivalent to sailing round the world single handed in a rowboat? |
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It was equivalent to approving violent actions to suppress our freedom of speech. |
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Opting out is the equivalent to handing back to your employer some of your rightful wages. |
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There is no tram equivalent to the National Railway Museum in York, but at least we have the pictures. |
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That is the equivalent to two dentists a week quitting NHS service in the area. |
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That sum is the equivalent to the entire GDP of all the countries in question. |
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We need urgently to develop our own homegrown equivalent to drive forward change. |
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The area sealed off is the equivalent to one quarter of the whole country, which shares a border with Iraq. |
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The carnival is the equivalent to a big match day in terms of manpower, although it is usually peaceful. |
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Perhaps this is just the modern day equivalent to the old Charabanc trip to the sea side. |
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This is surely the media equivalent to saying that the sun revolves around the earth. |
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India was at last ready for a swadeshi equivalent to the New York or London Review of Books. |
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It's the equivalent to sitting down to a game of poker and being dealt a royal flush with your first hand. |
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Isochromosome 17 in this tumor may be functionally equivalent to monosomy 17, as the short arm is lost. |
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The baryonic number, which is equivalent to the atomic mass number, has to remain constant for a reaction. |
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It's also possible that an Apatosaurus tail had a highly flexible extension, equivalent to a bullwhip's popper. |
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The Avestan yasna is equivalent to yajna, zrazda to shraddha, and kavi is common to both texts. |
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This preliminary surcharge is equivalent to an average of 8.0 m of backfill east of the quay wall. |
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With 240 man-days being equivalent to one man-year, the saving is 35.18 man-years. |
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Average monthly salaries have been estimated to be roughly equivalent to 31,500 tenges. |
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In these cases, the 24-bit fixed standard is equivalent to the 24-bit mantissa, plus 8-bit exponent used in the 32-bit, floating-point version. |
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The second assumption is that reaction mechanisms themselves are equivalent to those observed in the test tube. |
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It was recognized that such a marking was equivalent to payment, and that a marked instrument could not be returned as dishonoured. |
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He is our nearest contemporary equivalent to Blake, our sweetest-natured screwed-up visionary. |
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A majority of their Lordships treated a material increase in the risk as equivalent to a material contribution to the damage. |
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Simony is the religious equivalent to barratry, the very crime Dante was accused of. |
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Even if they come sixth, however, they could receive one and a half times their salary on top of basic pay and a bonus equivalent to that salary. |
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Then they say that discrimination against gays is unjust, but backhand them saying that same-sex unions aren't equivalent to marriage. |
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Someone may counter by saying that traditionally Chinese people prefer to live a long life because longevity is equivalent to beatitude. |
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No, they used the local equivalent to Cockney slang and it took me quite a while to get my tongue round it. |
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The weight of gold is measured in Troy, with one Troy ounce of gold equivalent to 480 grains of wheat. |
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That is equivalent to seven times the value of all known oil reserves in the country and 31 times the value of foreign direct investment. |
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Each of these processes becomes a male gamete termed a microgamete which is equivalent to a mammalian spermatozoon. |
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In shedding the weight, equivalent to more than 40 bags of sugar, Christine overcame a sweet tooth, which saw her balloon to a 26 dress size. |
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Deflation would be equivalent to an inflation of minus two percent pa, with prices generally decreasing. |
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There's no equivalent to what it would have been like to miscast the main role, it would have been a terrible movie. |
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Period armory seems to have considered the billet equivalent to the delf and no difference is granted between them in Society heraldry. |
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Measurements of infrared light reveal that the black hole has a mass equivalent to three billion suns. |
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Microglia, brain cells equivalent to the monocytes of the immune system, surrounded the plaques that were not yet cleared. |
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It appears morally equivalent to blood sports such as bearbaiting and cockfighting that have been illegal for some two centuries. |
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The amount is equivalent to more than six months wages for a lot of workers. |
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One hopes they don't mean terracing with a gradient equivalent to that of an Olympic ski jump. |
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Dead Center uses no new technology, just a new philosophy equivalent to trading skybox seats on the 50-yard line for the upper deck. |
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The slashes in Caxton's text were an experiment in punctuation, and are roughly equivalent to commas. |
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He's a voice for US unilateralism, nation-building by warfare and neoconservative principles in which free markets are equivalent to democracy. |
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It is true that some people use pointer in a broader sense more-or-less equivalent to reference, so the distinction made above is not universal. |
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A single nanoparticle inside of one cell would be equivalent to an ant inside an automobile. |
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During the conflict in Bosnia in the mid-1990s, NATO deployed 60,000 troops, equivalent to one soldier for every 66 Bosnians. |
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As we saw earlier, this is equivalent to just over one turn of the bottlescrew, or about 0.7kg in increased shroud tension. |
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I guess hurricanes are the Caribbean equivalent to a snow day in the United States. |
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So what I'm asking is, are generics truly equivalent to the brand-name drugs? |
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One Btu, British thermal unit, is roughly equivalent to burning one kitchen match. |
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The standard supports video coding with quality roughly equivalent to VHS videotape. |
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As a result, they may not be equivalent to brand-name products or as safe as generics purchased from a legitimate site in the United States. |
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Megakaryocyte capacitances were in the range of 64-694 pF, equivalent to 500-5500 platelets. |
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It is necessary to move buses on separate lanes, as the impact of one bus on the road is equivalent to that of four cars. |
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Mozart's music may be the harmonious equivalent to countryside palaces or grand neoclassical academies. |
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I was just wondering if there's any possibility to have hylafax send the tone equivalent to pressing the hash mark on a regular phone? |
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Above the serfs were the Villeins, freemen who were tied to their lord's land, equivalent to the Saxon gebur. |
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A unit is roughly equivalent to a small glass of wine or half a pint of beer of average strength. |
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An area of 2,000 square metres is equivalent to a strip of land just 100 metres long and 20 metres wide. |
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The deepest layer is gabbro, coarse-grained but chemically equivalent to basalt, which forms when magma cools and crystallizes slowly. |
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We defined obesity as a body mass index equal to or greater than the 95th centile, equivalent to a standard deviation score of 1.64 or more. |
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In fact, a former chamberlain to the Crown Prince described the remarks as the equivalent to a declaration of war. |
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If the overtime ban was lifted the amount of overtime worked by firefighters would be equivalent to 4,500 jobs. |
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A 15 to 30 minute tanning session is equivalent to an entire day spent in the sun. |
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An estimation for Swedish sunbed users even gives the annual UV dose from sunbeds as approximately equivalent to that from sun exposure. |
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Already 2,500 technicians have rejected a pay, allowances and superannuation package equivalent to an 18 per cent rise. |
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This process is functionally equivalent to swarming in honeybees, but with a longer time scale. |
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Much work had been equivalent to that carried out by trainee solicitors or paralegals. |
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He has travelled more than 774,200 miles on trips in Italy and abroad, equivalent to nearly 30 times the circumference of the earth. |
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A network of mini hydel power plants can deliver energy equivalent to a big hydel project without imposing a strain on ecological systems. |
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The impact energy of 20 million tons of TNT was roughly equivalent to the power of a hydrogen bomb. |
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Is it a hiding place away from the prying eyes of Gestapo agents, or is it equivalent to collaborating with the enemy? |
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There are many officers in the embassy who are equivalent to general officers and colonels. |
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A single large rocket inflicts damage equivalent to that of a large mortar shell. |
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Conciliation is not capitulation, nor is compromise to be deemed equivalent to imbalanced concession. |
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Isn't being a blind rebel equivalent to being a conformist of a different kind? |
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Some amphoras seem to be multiples of the choe, equivalent to the Roman congius. |
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Neither is equivalent to protein activation, which is the functionally activated form of the receptor. |
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Almost any bird needs a cuttlebone or mineral equivalent to keep their bones healthy and beaks sharp. |
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The paper points out that the energy of 2.66 gallons of ethanol is equivalent to 1.74 gallons of gasoline. |
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An independent forensic specialist determined that the foam's combustibility was equivalent to 13 gallons of gasoline. |
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To close the account is equivalent to signing a death warrant for the customer's business. |
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Malta's decimal currency has the lira as its basic unit and one lira is equivalent to 100 cents. |
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He said that during his career he had delivered something like 8,000 babies, roughly equivalent to the town's population today. |
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The government then pays grant-in-aid to the BBC of a sum equivalent to the licence fee revenue. |
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The Daily Telegraph has also learned that the planned housing density for the eco-towns in some places is equivalent to an inner city. |
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The sievert is numerically equivalent to the gray for electrons and for X-rays irradiating the whole body. |
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The heat capacity is numerically, but not dimensionally, equivalent to another quantity, the specific heat. |
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I classify scaring the public with such a fact as something equivalent to grossing them out as well. |
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A predicate is exclusively disjunctive if and only it is equivalent to a disjunction of disjoint predicates. |
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This zero intensity point is equivalent to a dislocation on a crystal lattice. |
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The colloidal particles of the disperse phase are equivalent to the solute of a solution and the continuous phase is equivalent to the solvent. |
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That value is equivalent to the weight of a given piece of evidence in proving or disproving a fact at issue. |
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The unit of measure is a Dobson unit, which is equivalent to 1 milli-centimetre atmosphere of column ozone. |
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It was equivalent to saying that gravity did not exist on Earth and then proving it, right in front of her eyes. |
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After World War II, no typology equivalent to the World War I doughboy arose. |
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In other words, smoking dope is equivalent to a parking violation but the penalty for peddling it is equal to that for manslaughter or aggravated rape. |
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I have already had a discount equivalent to a part-exchange sale. |
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Using daily dosages equivalent to the threshold dose for erythema production in untanned human skin, he found that the peak carcinogenic response occurred at 310 nm. |
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Arrows depict the high amplitude ground surface waves with velocities equivalent to Rayleigh waves, and higher velocity body waves, most probably p waves. |
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Thus, students, if likely to participate, prefer to participate in programs in which they receive university credit that is equivalent to pharmacy clerkships. |
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In his hands, spatial autonomy becomes equivalent to cultural stagnation. |
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A 400g can of waterblommetjies is equivalent to about 300g of flowers. |
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The solution was to provide legislatively for rights equivalent to co-ownership by customers of fungible securities held by the settlement systems. |
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With these diatomic molecules, there is an Avogadro's number of diatomic molecules in the amount of gas that is equivalent to the relative molecular mass. |
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These comprise all biopsied patients included in our files as cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis, a term considered equivalent to idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. |
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If this condition is not met, structural compounds are mobilized to maintain a minimum value of respiration which, in the model, is equivalent to a negative growth rate. |
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At the time Corps engineers called their approximation a standard project hurricane, equivalent to what today would be called a fast-moving category 3 storm. |
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An anomalistic lunar month is the lunar equivalent to the solar anomalistic year which indicates the passage of the sun around the earth from perigee to perigee. |
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Small homes often have only kerosene lamps to provide light, which spew toxins equivalent to two packs of cigarettes a day. |
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One minute of laughing is equivalent to ten minutes on a rowing machine. |
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In particular, he conjectured that any smooth 3-surface that has no edges, no corkscrew-like twists, and no doughnut-like holes must be topologically equivalent to a 3-sphere. |
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The stipend is equivalent to a dancer's monthly salary paid to board members to attend one-off meetings to discuss the dancers' possible retrenchment. |
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Most Hindus consider bovicide to be equivalent to matricide. |
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We're all Mary Sue's to him, which is the equivalent to being a Jane Doe. |
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If the same experiment is done with spleens, however, each spleen grows much less than normal so that the final total mass of the spleens is equivalent to one normal spleen. |
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He was able to show that any 2-dimensional surface having the same fundamental group as the 2-dimensional surface of a sphere is topologically equivalent to a sphere. |
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The following list of false friends will be helpful to Spanish speakers as the Spanish equivalent to the given English word means something different. |
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To name culprits who had not defended themselves and were not obliged to do so would have been the moral equivalent to convicting someone without due process. |
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The court heard the noise outside his house was equivalent to a pneumatic drill going off through the night and was four times the recommended limit for sleep disturbance. |
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We need to build castles of security along trade routes that feature security technology equivalent to the moats, drawbridges, and watch towers of that period. |
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Asking a carpenter or handyman to render an opinion regarding the structural integrity of a building is equivalent to asking a nurse's aid to diagnose a malignant carcinoma. |
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Stepping out by a distance equivalent to the solar radius, the coronal brightness drops by about a factor of a thousand, to be about a billionth that of the solar disk. |
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While most housings use a rubber O-ring to seal out water, EPIC uses a boot, or rubberized end cap, which is basically equivalent to four O-rings. |
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In dealing with simultaneous equations, Zhu certainly presented improvements, giving a method essentially equivalent to Gauss's pivotal condensation. |
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The fulvic acids from solid-phase source materials contain only hydrophobic organic acids, so they are operationally equivalent to fulvic acids from natural waters. |
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I suppose the male equivalent to these little secrets was flying at half mast, flying low or egg on your face, to indicate undone or untidy trouser flies. |
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In order to do this effectively it may be given powers equivalent to those of the High Court to summon witnesses, send for documents, administer oaths, etc. |
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The cheapest bus fare is roughly equivalent to a nurse's weekly wage. |
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If two conjunctions are logically equivalent, it does not follow that the conjuncts of one are logically equivalent to the conjuncts of the other. |
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The Italian, Austrian, Portuguese, Spanish, Greek, Norwegian and Danish governments insist on offsets equivalent to the full price of defence industry contracts. |
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The holy grail for a curler, equivalent to a seven-ball victory in pool, is to have all eight stones nearer to the house than your opposition but such instances are very rare. |
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Furthermore, he thought that the antinomies which led to the foundational crisis, could be solved without the notion that existence is equivalent to formal constructability. |
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Subsidy levels will be equivalent to 20 cents per litre of pure ethanol for two years, 15 cents per litre for three years and 10 cents per litre for three years. |
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The weight of the chair back is equivalent to two paving slabs. |
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The Caribbean boasts the highest coral reef diversity in the Atlantic Ocean, but this is only equivalent to the least diverse regions of the Indo-Pacific. |
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A is equivalent to A for all A in the set of upper case Latin characters. |
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It was a Karvitaka, an equivalent to a yeti, but a lot bigger. |
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The enhancement caused by shape change is equivalent to 0.6 milliseconds. |
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What is so difficult to understand about my point that speculation based on book learning is not equivalent to speculation based on personal experience? |
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Goats milk is the closest equivalent to human breast milk and I always take these in combination with oil of oregano capsules. |
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At that time, there had been no legislation for customary rights equivalent to the Act of 1832 for easements or the Act of 1932 for public rights of way. |
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According to Badhwar, the total increase in cosmonaut exposure was about 6 or 7 rem, a dose equivalent to 100 to 150 days of additional radiation exposure. |
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This is also equivalent to exposure to a level of one roentgen. |
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A concert pianist who is sitting down at the concert grand piano in Carnegie Hall in front of a packed house is the equivalent to an author publishing a finished book. |
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The compensation mentioned in paragraph 1 of this Article shall be equivalent to the value of the expropriated investments immediately before the expropriation is made. |
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The lhc is giving you enormously high energy, which is equivalent to looking at short distances. |
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Since there was no artificial liver or heart equivalent to the artificial kidney, if these transplanted organs did not function immediately, death was inevitable. |
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On one day, the coffee drinkers were given a 250-milligram dose of caffeine in the morning and again at lunchtime, equivalent to four cups of coffee in total. |
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Another possible EU equivalent to the tenth amendment might be a proposed catalogue of competences assigning policy responsibilities to specific levels of government. |
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On a weight basis, a billion ultra-fine particles are about equivalent to one coarse particle 10 micrometres in diameter, but have one thousand times the surface area. |
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The Roman republic exacted tribute in the form of payments equivalent to proportional property taxes, for the purpose of waging war. |
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By coincidence, an anker is also a European liquid measure roughly equivalent to eight and a half gallons. |
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A polytope is called inscribable if it is combinatorially equivalent to a polytope that has all its vertices on a sphere. |
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The FDA today ordered the withdrawal of four tobacco products that it found were not substantially equivalent to existing products. |
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The built-in FFT analysis functions with their 128 kpoints are equivalent to those found on larger oscilloscopes. |
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Ectopic cysts will be highly echogenic, while corpus luteum will have an echogenicity equivalent to or slightly less than the ovary itself. |
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An operator unitarily equivalent to a ek-paranormal for some positive integer k, is also a ek-paranormal operator. |
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Each freezer pop is equivalent to one spoonful of Benylin for Children cough syrup. |
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With only a little over 200 field game wardens, the furloughs create a situation where we lose the time equivalent to 28 wardens. |
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But despite this, they completed qualifications equivalent to O-Grade and Highers in communications at the College earlier this year. |
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It can store more than a gigabyte of information equivalent to around 12 hours of music in one cubic centimetre. |
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A gigatonne is 1 billion tonnes, equivalent to about twice the mass of all 7 billion people on Earth twice. |
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To power a modest-sized data center by bicycle power would require almost a million pedalers and an area equivalent to 347 football fields. |
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A foot-candle is equivalent to the illumination produced per square foot by one candle at a distance of one foot. |
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As of April 2016, the Bank held around 400,000 bars, which is equivalent to 5,134 tonnes of gold. |
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It has been shown to be equivalent to 7-field stereo color fundus photography, the current gold standard for detection of diabetic retinopathy. |
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One petajoule is equivalent to a million gigajoules and the average, well-insulated home can be heated using 50 gigajoules a year. |
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One petajoule is equivalent to a million gigajoules and the average, well insulated home can be heated using 50 gigajoules a year. |
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In fact, it has been suggested that the sediment in shallow lakes is equivalent to the metalimnion in deep lakes. |
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The analyzer can determine angle differences much less than one microradian, equivalent to an ant viewed from a mile away. |
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Each particular screw size a hex equivalent to that of a standard socket head cap screw, so no special tools are required for installation. |
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A castrato is a type of classical male singing voice equivalent to that of a soprano, mezzo-soprano, or contralto. |
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The notion that the absence of welfare receipt is equivalent to self-sufficiency has been proved false by much research evidence. |
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Lafferty wrote his novel Past Master as a modern equivalent to More's Utopia, which he saw as a satire. |
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Kinesthetic feedback has not yet developed to the point where a cyberhug is equivalent to the real thing. |
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It can be proved that a Dedekind domain is equivalent to an integral domain in which every proper fractional ideal is invertible. |
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All enumerable sets are equivalent to each other, but not to any finite set. |
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As she led him into the house, she told him that the High Father, her adoptive great-grandfather, was equivalent to a Supreme Court Justice. |
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The area which this kingdom covered included most of Southern Northumbria, roughly equivalent to the borders of Yorkshire extending further West. |
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The Formative stage is equivalent to the Neolithic Revolution period in Europe, Asia, and Africa. |
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The losses of income from the Diocese of Africa were equivalent to the costs of nearly 40,000 infantry or over 20,000 cavalry. |
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A state of isopolity existed when the citizenship of one city was made equivalent to that of another, and vice versa. |
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That's roughly equivalent to the number of German citizens who died from Allied raids. |
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Some researchers estimate that the state is losing a land mass equivalent to 30 football fields every day. |
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She completed the swim, nominally 11 miles but equivalent to 22 miles because of tidal flows, in 7 hours 20 minutes. |
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It is widely considered to be the computing world's highest honour, equivalent to the Nobel Prize. |
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There are several other schools, equivalent to the type of school formerly known as a secondary modern school. |
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Examinations are handled by international British boards and the program is equivalent to Higher Secondary School Certificate. |
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It is roughly equivalent to Habilitation in Germany, France, Austria, and some other European countries. |
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In countries with only one doctoral degree, the degree of Kandidat Nauk should be considered for recognition as equivalent to this degree. |
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A formula equivalent to Heron's was discovered by the Chinese independently of the Greeks. |
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Upon graduation, students receive a licenciatura in their chosen subject area, which is equivalent to an American Bachelor's degree. |
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It required three years of study, being roughly equivalent to the present licenciatura. |
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A degree of Doutor usually enables an individual to apply for a junior faculty position equivalent to a US Assistant Professor. |
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A lighter version, the cisium, equivalent to a gig, was open above and in front and had a seat. |
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Gross domestic product per capita is equivalent to that of the average economies of Europe. |
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Irish Citizens in the UK have a status almost equivalent to British Citizens. |
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The office of Provost or Convener is roughly equivalent to that of a Mayor in other parts of the United Kingdom. |
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Scottish communities are the nearest equivalent to civil parishes in England. |
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Bermudas's consumption tax is equivalent to local income tax to local residents and funds government and infrastructure expenditures. |
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In the quantitative meters in Sanskrit a heavy syllable is considered to be equal to two morae and a light syllable equivalent to one mora. |
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Tamil nouns can take one of four prefixes, i, a, u, and e which are functionally equivalent to the demonstratives in English. |
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It is also the equivalent to Junior Certifcate examinations in the Republic of Ireland. |
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Jackson notes the legal term galnys, equivalent to Welsh galanas, may show syncope of internal syllables to be a feature of Cumbric. |
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The Institute of Musical Studies offers degrees equivalent to secondary school. |
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Under Estonian law, since 15 December 2000 the cryptographic signature is legally equivalent to a manual signature. |
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The chief magistrate or convener of a burgh, equivalent to a mayor, was called a provost. |
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An air chief marshal is equivalent to an admiral in the Royal Navy or a general in the British Army or the Royal Marines. |
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It is an offence under common law and is roughly equivalent to the offence of manslaughter in English law. |
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The O grade was equivalent to a GCE Ordinary Level pass which indicated a performance equivalent to the lowest pass grade at Ordinary Level. |
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This job is equivalent to that of groundsman in some other cricketing nations. |
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It is important to note here that bilinguals' overall vocabulary size in both languages combined was equivalent to monolinguals' in one language. |
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In other words, bathymetry is the underwater equivalent to hypsometry or topography. |
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This zone is permanently covered with seawater and is approximately equivalent to the neritic zone. |
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Benthic assemblages in urbanized coastal regions are not functionally equivalent to benthic assemblages in untouched regions. |
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That is equivalent to approximately 3 billion urbanites by 2050, much of which will occur in Africa and Asia. |
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Australia's equivalent to the rabbit, the bilby, was quickly pushed out by the rabbits. |
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The dipole is roughly equivalent to a powerful bar magnet, with its south pole pointing towards the geomagnetic North Pole. |
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Each harmonic is equivalent to a particular arrangement of magnetic charges at the center of the Earth. |
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A dipole is equivalent to two opposing charges brought close together and a quadrupole to two dipoles brought together. |
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An alternative definition for the maximum potential intensity, which is mathematically equivalent to the above formulation, is. |
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A submerged equivalent to the current South Sandwich Arc was relocated westward by the same spreading centre. |
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The Welsh equivalent to Lyonesse and Ker Ys is Cantre'r Gwaelod, a legendary drowned kingdom in Cardigan Bay. |
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They were shown on Ordnance Survey maps of the time under both titles, and are equivalent to the modern ceremonial counties. |
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Depending on how a specific publication defines the Sangamonian Stage of North America, the Eemian is equivalent to either all or part of it. |
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A helical scan with a pitch of zero is equivalent to constant z-axis scanning. |
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With the replacement of the rixdollar by the rupee in 1852, a shilling was deemed to be equivalent to half a rupee. |
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On the decimalisation of the currency in 1869, a shilling was deemed to be equivalent to 50 Ceylon cents. |
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Eunuchs had ranks that were equivalent to civil service ranks, only theirs had four grades instead of nine. |
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These hunts were distinctive from hunts in other cultures where they were the equivalent to small unit actions. |
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Each second of error is equivalent to 15 seconds of longitude error, which at the equator is a position error of. |
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The city is roughly equivalent to the Province of Lima, which is subdivided into 43 districts. |
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However, although in some countries and periods the rank of voivode was equivalent to a Western duke, it was not universally so. |
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Similarly, the hock contains bones equivalent to those in the human ankle and heel. |
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Whether or not the case variants are treated as equivalent to each other varies depending on the computer system and context. |
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An equivalent to causing death by dangerous driving in Canada under the Criminal Code is Causing death by criminal negligence. |
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In cognitive linguistics, the notion of conceptual metaphor may be equivalent to that of analogy. |
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The precedence of a Lord Keeper of the Great Seal is equivalent to that of a Lord Chancellor. |
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In practice the hectare is fully derived from the SI, being equivalent to a square hectometre. |
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Since pH is a logarithmic scale, a difference of one pH unit is equivalent to a tenfold difference in hydrogen ion concentration. |
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In this paper, we discuss whether every normal polytope is unimodularly equivalent to a face of some normal Gorenstein Fano polytope. |
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The interior design equivalent to comfort food, wing chairs are soaring in popularity again. |
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Defense attorney Montasser Zayat said three of those convicted received life sentences, which he said in Egyptian law was equivalent to 25 years. |
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Experimental Low Frequency Active Sonar, at peak level, produces a noise equivalent to standing five feet from the space shuttle on take-off. |
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In the trials, the two companies verified that sitagliptin exerts a hypoglycemic effect equivalent to glipizide. |
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Mowing a yard that is one-third of an acre with a NaturCut Push Reel Mower is equivalent to walking approximately two miles. |
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If the reaction goes to completion the amount of resorufin formed, should be stoichiometrically equivalent to the amount of 2DG uptake. |
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Their buzzing can reach 90 decibels, equivalent to some power motors. |
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It is also the equivalent to Leaving Certifcate examinations in the Republic of Ireland. |
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