By the Recorded Delivery Service Act 1962 a letter sent by recorded delivery is equivalent to a registered letter. |
|
Facultative amphimixis is the equivalent of the mechanism described under meiotic parthenogenesis. |
|
But for MML the transition stage will be the railway equivalent of getting a quart into a pint pot. |
|
Fuel economy, emissions ratings and performance are equivalent to the standard wheelbase XJ saloons. |
|
Socioeconomic status was measured by the equivalent family income quintile of the patient. |
|
The leaves are long and smooth and travel up the entire stem, equivalent to alfalfa. |
|
The only way her husband can get the money is to provide lands of equivalent worth to Judith and her children. |
|
The Bequerel is a unit of radioactivity, which is equivalent to the number of radioactive particles detected per second. |
|
Prayer wheels are the spiritual equivalent of football rattles, though the motivation is not quite the same. |
|
An ardent Kantian, Muller believed that he had found the physiological equivalent of Kant's categories of thought. |
|
Would one coin a decipherable Konkani equivalent for a medical term as simple as sinusitis? |
|
That change is equivalent to the piston movement in a car's engine which ultimately drives the wheels round. |
|
Why can you not attribute to the skilled workman the trade or professional equivalent of Halsbury's Laws of England? |
|
The Job Holder should be a graduate BSc or equivalent in an analytical chemistry or biological discipline. |
|
Where Scandinavian influence was strongest, such as Yorkshire and the Five Boroughs, the equivalent sub-division was the wapentake. |
|
Such a move would be the economic equivalent of an animal gnawing off its foot to get out of a trap. |
|
The lenses were reported as the largest ever ground for photographic work-the telescopic rectilinear lens being 11 feet equivalent focus. |
|
This is the theatrical equivalent of the whodunnit you buy at the airport as you go on holiday. |
|
Here, rescaling the rotational velocity is equivalent to stretching the time domain. |
|
In the billions of years since, they have cooled to less than three degrees Kelvin above absolute zero, equivalent to microwave frequencies. |
|
|
I worked out the equivalent points on a rectilinear grid using trigonometry. |
|
With the verbal equivalent of one of those ferocious aces he whacks past opponents, Andy Roddick has summed up life in just 18 words. |
|
The idea that a walk-through might present an experience equivalent to actually being inside a building is wishful thinking indeed. |
|
Basking sharks feed exclusively on plankton and are the coolwater equivalent of the tropical whale shark. |
|
Bank withdrawals, mostly in small notes, shot up by the equivalent of half a billion dollars in the week before the vote. |
|
An area in which radiation levels could result in an individual receiving a dose equivalent in excess of 0.1 rem per hour. |
|
The finished aluminum coil may weigh only half as much as the equivalent copper wire coil. |
|
These days, the equivalent dates in Scotland are Martinmas, Candlemas, Whitsunday and Lammas. |
|
One meter is equivalent to 1.09 yards and one inch is equivalent to 2.54 centimeters. |
|
One industry expert described this move as the Hollywood equivalent of jumping the shark. |
|
In French meat cookery, jus is roughly equivalent to honestly made thin gravy in the British tradition. |
|
A second great myth is that property is literally as safe as houses while the stock market is the investment equivalent of Dodge City. |
|
Annual capacity would be 200,000 tonnes, equivalent to 1.7 million barrels or 1.97 million hectolitres of beer. |
|
Most of the houses are two storeys and would be equivalent to a medium to large sized Queensland home. |
|
Exhibition games are the NFL equivalent of football's meaningless pre-season friendlies. |
|
Psychedelic drugs, or hallucinogens, produce the equivalent of waking dreams. |
|
Staff have been told that the equivalent of up to 1,000 jobs could go across the three sites by the end of 2004 by natural wastage. |
|
Their opinion is no more valid than it would be if they declared pounds henceforth equivalent to kilograms. |
|
She speaks the equivalent of fifth grade Japanese and is in her third year of taking Mandarin. |
|
Is being killfiled the email equivalent of being nuked or being threatened with germ warfare? |
|
|
These records are equivalent to the till receipts you are given when shopping in the physical world. |
|
Total supply chain cost for the unit is said to be equivalent to the price of a quality aftermarket booster seat. |
|
The question of whether your position is meaningful is pretty much equivalent to what I meant by true, yah. |
|
Every barbarian language had an equivalent term, and all of them were based on a derivative of that language's word for fury. |
|
The participants have a reputation as lawless and irresponsible, the glamorous equivalent of Magaluf lager louts. |
|
Served cold or as chacau haa, hot chocolate, this was the basic cacao beverage-the espresso equivalent of an Americano. |
|
They now trade at the equivalent of roughly 14 times their 100p flotation price in July 1997, after making allowance for new share issues. |
|
In some career management fields, a master gunner's role would be equivalent to a warrant officer. |
|
To me, they are the audio equivalent of early xerox copies or mid-eighties computer animation. |
|
Despite this ecological variation, lacertids do not display an equivalent amount of anatomical variation. |
|
The certainty equivalent represents the amount of money a producer would accept to avoid the risk present in a particular revenue scenario. |
|
For that to be possible, gravity and acceleration must be exactly equivalent to one another. |
|
In complex number algebra, rationalization is the equivalent of the simplification of fractions in ordinary algebra. |
|
That's the Chinese equivalent of the old American tale that babies are dropped off by a stork at expectant parents' homes. |
|
I was lost, fresh back from Vietnam, searching, maybe, for a peril the equivalent of war but aimed in the direction of life. |
|
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. |
|
To form the equivalent of a passive, simply omit the agent noun phrase. |
|
Most Hindus consider bovicide to be equivalent to matricide. |
|
Those less-known companies manufacture equivalent products at cheaper prices. |
|
I haven't taken English 202, but I took an equivalent course at another university. |
|
|
Farmers are now expecting prices to lift by an equivalent amount. |
|
She takes a golf club, the country club equivalent of a Louisville slugger, and attacks his car. |
|
In Tampa, the equivalent trip took you through an Eraserhead dystopia of underpasses and asphalt plains. |
|
Everywhere seems big on cooked breakfasts and these were hearty affairs although I couldn't bring myself to try the local equivalent of white pudding. |
|
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. |
|
The grid is held together by the infrastructure equivalent of duct tape and prayer. |
|
Viewing the use of insensitive in vitro assays used to understand the equivalent insensitive rodent bioassays can be likened to the blind leading the blind. |
|
Arrows depict the high amplitude ground surface waves with velocities equivalent to Rayleigh waves, and higher velocity body waves, most probably p waves. |
|
Marine 1st Lt. Therrell Shane Childers was killed in Iraq on March 21, 2003, in the wartime equivalent of a drive-by shooting. |
|
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. |
|
Speaking in an interview in Lusaka yesterday, she said Zambian gemstones were fetching five dollars per carat, equivalent of five grammes, on the West African market. |
|
It was a Karvitaka, an equivalent to a yeti, but a lot bigger. |
|
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. |
|
Some compared the quebradita dancing style to the Mexican equivalent of dirty dancing, others as a mixture of lambada, cumbia, salsa, flamenco, tango, and the Texas two-step. |
|
A 400g can of waterblommetjies is equivalent to about 300g of flowers. |
|
We're all Mary Sue's to him, which is the equivalent to being a Jane Doe. |
|
Twenty four students from all walks of life completed access courses the equivalent of A levels for mature students who want to go to higher education. |
|
Make any change to the reference period, change the baseline, and all that happens is you create equivalent offsets to the beginning and ending anomaly. |
|
Hitting one of these submerged boxes, in a storm, steaming with the wind on your port quarter, would have been the equivalent of colliding with a supermarket delivery lorry. |
|
For a place with a past stretching into the dim mists, this is the architectural equivalent of a historical death. |
|
|
They can solve a variety of two-step problems using variables, identify equivalent algebraic expressions, and solve linear equations and inequalities. |
|
Tools having diameters greater than about 80 mm or equivalent sections in flat dimensions are difficult to harden to full hardness if there are re-entrant corners. |
|
Before conception, women need 1,200 mg of calcium per day, or the equivalent of a quart of milk or fortified orange juice, or six servings of fortified bread or cereals. |
|
It is amusing to note, however, that the doggie equivalent of red-eye in photos is an unsettling neon green, which my small photo-editing skills don't extend to erasing. |
|
The dose equivalent in rems is numerically equal to the absorbed dose in rads multiplied by the quality factor, which, for most medical radiation, is one. |
|
Actually some of the contras whom I knew were the moral equivalent of pathological killers. |
|
On a cluster of six or seven bananas, growers are allowed only the equivalent of one shirt button-sized blemish and no more than two blemished bunches per 15 kg box. |
|
For Toyota, that's the equivalent of getting rope-a-doped in the boxing ring. |
|
Far from flying off in alarm at my approach, as just about any other bird would, this specimen of Cathartes aura greeted me with the avian equivalent of a yawn. |
|
Desert Golfing is the gaming equivalent of putting TV on in the background. |
|
Energy use increased 1.9 percent from a year earlier to the equivalent of 9.52 million kiloliters of oil in September, the Bureau of Energy said on its Web site. |
|
In the U.S. the equivalent of an appellation is called an American Viticultural Area. |
|
Oh, sure, Rick Perry and Newt Gingrich called for slashing foreign aid, the foreign-policy equivalent of Amtrak. |
|
Energy use rose 5.8 percent from a year earlier to the equivalent of 9.83 million kiloliters of oil in August, the Bureau of Energy said yesterday. |
|
Why, they might even switch to amiable, Texas-accented, 77-year-old Schieffer, the television equivalent of comfort food. |
|
Instead, they kettled the students in one place, which is the policing equivalent of a parent using the naughty step rather than a slap to discipline their children. |
|
It is the equivalent of the 12-step Alcoholics Anonymous program for people who have lied themselves into a corner. |
|
The kernel of truth at the centre of an emotion is best discovered with the writerly equivalent of controlled burning, that is, a fearlessly wielded red pen. |
|
The chief magistrate or convener of a burgh, equivalent to a mayor, was called a provost. |
|
The equivalent word is also to be found in Frisian, Dutch, Norwegian, and Icelandic. |
|
|
They were proclaimed as a Celtic equivalent of the Classical writers such as Homer. |
|
An air chief marshal is equivalent to an admiral in the Royal Navy or a general in the British Army or the Royal Marines. |
|
The most common type of encoder is one that converts a nonbinary number system into an equivalent binary system. |
|
For an equivalent amount of heat, burning natural gas produces about 45 percent less carbon dioxide than burning coal for power. |
|
An equivalent in Canada is causing death by criminal negligence under the Criminal Code, punishable by a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. |
|
It is an offence under common law and is roughly equivalent to the offence of manslaughter in English law. |
|
Navy sought a replacement with either a larger yield or equivalent destructive power. |
|
The O grade was equivalent to a GCE Ordinary Level pass which indicated a performance equivalent to the lowest pass grade at Ordinary Level. |
|
Where the graphemes have a different value from the corresponding IPA symbols, the IPA equivalent is indicated between slashes. |
|
An equivalent tournament for women's football, the FIFA Women's World Cup, was first held in 1991 in China. |
|
Periodic series of nonequal payments, converted into an equivalent future value. |
|
Where v is the equivalent wind speed at 10 metres above the sea surface and B is Beaufort scale number. |
|
It is the mountain equivalent of the closely related common blackbird, and breeds in gullies, rocky areas or scree slopes. |
|
This new challenge, dubbed 'The 3 Lakes Challenge', is proposed as the swimming equivalent of the famous National Three Peaks Challenge. |
|
Whether or not the case variants are treated as equivalent to each other varies depending on the computer system and context. |
|
The equivalent weight of an element or compound is that weight equivalent in reactive power to one atomic weight of hydrogen. |
|
Two varieties are said to be birationally equivalent if there exists a birational map between them. |
|
The soul of dialect is cacography, the deliberate misspelling of words for comic effect, which is the written equivalent of the malapropism. |
|
Social media lighted up with corroborations that lower Manhattan was the meteorological equivalent of the jungles of Borneo. |
|
The 21st-century equivalent of the Berlin wall is a cyberbarrier, and we can help puncture it. |
|
|
Kinesthetic feedback has not yet developed to the point where a cyberhug is equivalent to the real thing. |
|
It can be proved that a Dedekind domain is equivalent to an integral domain in which every proper fractional ideal is invertible. |
|
The dragon is the symbol of power and wealth, but being born in a dragon year is more the financial equivalent of having a strong tail wind. |
|
For Chinese alchemists, gold held the key to the Elixir, the Eastern equivalent of the Philosopher's Stone. |
|
All enumerable sets are equivalent to each other, but not to any finite set. |
|
The height of the eyepoint depends on the focal length of the eyepiece and the position of its upper equivalent plane. |
|
In the House of Lords, the bill is called the Select Vestries Bill, while the Commons equivalent is the Outlawries Bill. |
|
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. |
|
The area which this kingdom covered included most of Southern Northumbria, roughly equivalent to the borders of Yorkshire extending further West. |
|
He is the historical equivalent of the character of the same name in William Shakespeare's Macbeth. |
|
The Formative stage is equivalent to the Neolithic Revolution period in Europe, Asia, and Africa. |
|
It required three years of study, being roughly equivalent to the present licenciatura. |
|
Each square marked off by four roads was called an insula, the Roman equivalent of a modern city block. |
|
The losses of income from the Diocese of Africa were equivalent to the costs of nearly 40,000 infantry or over 20,000 cavalry. |
|
Nameserver administrators also provide email forwarding, which is the equivalent of call-forwarding on the Intertubes. |
|
A state of isopolity existed when the citizenship of one city was made equivalent to that of another, and vice versa. |
|
In Ireland there was no equivalent of the English or Scottish Convention and William had to conquer Ireland by force. |
|
That territory almost doubled the size of the United States, adding the equivalent of 13 states to the Union. |
|
That's roughly equivalent to the number of German citizens who died from Allied raids. |
|
There is no equivalent body for England, which is directly governed by the Parliament and the government of the United Kingdom. |
|
|
Some researchers estimate that the state is losing a land mass equivalent to 30 football fields every day. |
|
Courts may consider rulings made in other courts that are of equivalent authority in the legal system. |
|
In the jurisdiction of the original decision, however, a judge should only overturn the holding of a court lower or equivalent in the hierarchy. |
|
She completed the swim, nominally 11 miles but equivalent to 22 miles because of tidal flows, in 7 hours 20 minutes. |
|
This challenge is intended as the swimming equivalent of the National Three Peaks Challenge. |
|
As of April 2016, the Bank held around 400,000 bars, which is equivalent to 5,134 tonnes of gold. |
|
A reinforced runway will be needed to tolerate the high equivalent single wheel load. |
|
It is widely considered to be the computing world's highest honour, equivalent to the Nobel Prize. |
|
A literal character and its markup counterpart are considered equivalent and are rendered identically. |
|
There are several other schools, equivalent to the type of school formerly known as a secondary modern school. |
|
Though British Chinese women have both high individual and equivalent incomes, but they also have very dispersed incomes. |
|
These diplomas are considered to be equivalent and are both accredited at level 7 of the revised National Qualifications Framework. |
|
Ergyng eventually became a mere cantref, the Welsh equivalent of a hundred. |
|
Lafferty wrote his novel Past Master as a modern equivalent to More's Utopia, which he saw as a satire. |
|
It is also the equivalent to Leaving Certifcate examinations in the Republic of Ireland. |
|
All subjects completed in the fifth of the European Baccalaureate are generally equivalent to the GCSEs subjects. |
|
Obtaining A Level or equivalent qualifications is generally required for university entrance. |
|
Examinations are handled by international British boards and the program is equivalent to Higher Secondary School Certificate. |
|
It is roughly equivalent to Habilitation in Germany, France, Austria, and some other European countries. |
|
In countries with only one doctoral degree, the degree of Kandidat Nauk should be considered for recognition as equivalent to this degree. |
|
|
Upon graduation, students receive a licenciatura in their chosen subject area, which is equivalent to an American Bachelor's degree. |
|
A degree of Doutor usually enables an individual to apply for a junior faculty position equivalent to a US Assistant Professor. |
|
Admission to the diploma requires as UK degree or equivalent plus relevant experience. |
|
In many ways, baths were the ancient Roman equivalent of community centres. |
|
The modern equivalent would be a combination of a library, art gallery, mall, restaurant, gym, and spa. |
|
The gromatici, the Roman equivalent of rod men, placed rods and put down a line called the rigor. |
|
A lighter version, the cisium, equivalent to a gig, was open above and in front and had a seat. |
|
The line Tribunes were commanders of Cohortes and were approximately the equivalent of colonels. |
|
The equivalent concept of the duties performed in modern camps is roughly the detail. |
|
A cheese this size would use the equivalent of the daily milk production of 16,000 cows. |
|
A spaghetti equivalent called Nan gyi thohk exists, in which wheat or rice noodles are eaten with thick chicken curry. |
|
But these include the group of Venus figurines, which have no real equivalent in cave paintings. |
|
In 1926, Albert Stanburrough Cook suggested a Homeric connection due to equivalent formulas, metonymies, and analogous voyages. |
|
Rather than a republic, Lawrence called for an absolute dictator and equivalent dictatrix to lord over the lower peoples. |
|
Another not-so-nice term is meat puppet, a newscaster who is the intellectual equivalent of a puppet. |
|
In opera, the informal equivalent is diva, which means a distinguished singer, but may also denote a prima donna. |
|
The BFI declared Life of Brian to be the 28th best British film of all time, in their equivalent of the original AFI's 100 Years. |
|
They still have the equivalent dot rating, but are named to help choose a ball that is appropriate for one's skill level. |
|
Tungsten on the other hand, is twice as dense as brass thus a barrel of an equivalent weight could be thirty percent smaller in diameter. |
|
The female equivalent of hurling is called camogie and is played by teams from Northern Irish and London. |
|
|
The incumbent, Archbishop Pietro Parolin, is the See's equivalent of a prime minister. |
|
Gross domestic product per capita is equivalent to that of the average economies of Europe. |
|
Irish Citizens in the UK have a status almost equivalent to British Citizens. |
|
In a global context, world GDP and world GNI are, therefore, equivalent terms. |
|
Official bilingualism laws also contributed to the disuse of Dominion, as it has no acceptable equivalent in French. |
|
On 13 and 15 August, thirteen and thirty aircraft were lost, the equivalent of an entire Gruppe, and the type's worst losses during the campaign. |
|
The equivalent label in North America uses one to six dots to denote temperature with an optional temperature in degrees Celsius. |
|
The office of Provost or Convener is roughly equivalent to that of a Mayor in other parts of the United Kingdom. |
|
Scottish communities are the nearest equivalent to civil parishes in England. |
|
Bermudas's consumption tax is equivalent to local income tax to local residents and funds government and infrastructure expenditures. |
|
A projet de loi is the equivalent of a UK bill or a French projet de loi, and a law is the equivalent of a UK act of parliament or a French loi. |
|
The equivalent of the royal assent is not sufficient to cause an Act of Tynwald to come into full force of law in the Isle of Man. |
|
In the third quarter of 2009, there were a little over 17,000 full time equivalent serving police officers. |
|
He said the situation would be the equivalent of the United States taking in 30,000,000 refugees. |
|
The currency itself has no innate value, but is accepted by traders because it can be redeemed for the equivalent specie. |
|
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. |
|
The differential and integral equations formulations are mathematically equivalent and are both useful. |
|
The equivalent of a drop of water distributed over 500,000 lamps will significantly increase darkening. |
|
Tamil nouns can take one of four prefixes, i, a, u, and e which are functionally equivalent to the demonstratives in English. |
|
The government paid scientists the equivalent salary of professional athletes today. |
|
|
It is also the equivalent to Junior Certifcate examinations in the Republic of Ireland. |
|
The main effect of this was to replace CSYS with a broadly equivalent qualification called Advanced Higher. |
|
Jackson notes the legal term galnys, equivalent to Welsh galanas, may show syncope of internal syllables to be a feature of Cumbric. |
|
Hutchison as the musical equivalent of the Scots Baronial castles of Abbotsford and Balmoral. |
|
So we formed an orchestra and played in the equivalent of the NAAFI during our spare time. |
|
In addition, an equivalent awards ceremony for classical music, called the Classic Brit Awards, is held each May. |
|
A sculling oar is shorter and has a smaller blade area than the equivalent sweep oar. |
|
The Institute of Musical Studies offers degrees equivalent to secondary school. |
|
Under Estonian law, since 15 December 2000 the cryptographic signature is legally equivalent to a manual signature. |
|
That's the equivalent of about10 years of oil production and 50 years of gas. |
|
A Shire Commissioner was the closest equivalent of the English office of Member of Parliament, namely a commoner or member of the lower nobility. |
|
The Legion Legate was the equivalent of full Brigadier with the Imperial Legate holding the rank of General. |
|
This job is equivalent to that of groundsman in some other cricketing nations. |
|
It is important to note here that bilinguals' overall vocabulary size in both languages combined was equivalent to monolinguals' in one language. |
|
Cawl served as a single course is today the most popular way to serve the meal, which is similar to its north Wales equivalent lobsgows. |
|
This refers specifically to the dose in a specific tissue or organ, in a similar way to external equivalent dose. |
|
This is a restatement of the equivalent laws of conservation of energy and conservation of mass. |
|
This makes the toxicity of plutonium roughly equivalent with that of nerve gas. |
|
Higher stiffness and lower density translates to thinner, lighter blades offering equivalent performance. |
|
While these units are equivalent for simple resistive circuits, they differ when loads exhibit electrical reactance. |
|
|
An isochrone shows lines of equivalent drive time or travel time to a given location and is used in the generation of isochrone maps. |
|
An isotim shows equivalent transport costs from the source of a raw material, and an isodapane shows equivalent cost of travel time. |
|
In other words, bathymetry is the underwater equivalent to hypsometry or topography. |
|
The Croats call it Limski kanal, which does not translate precisely to the English equivalent either. |
|
Numerous larger and smaller tributary rivers bear the name of the Rhine or equivalent in various Romansh idioms like Rein or Ragn. |
|
This zone is permanently covered with seawater and is approximately equivalent to the neritic zone. |
|
Benthic assemblages in urbanized coastal regions are not functionally equivalent to benthic assemblages in untouched regions. |
|
This gave them a paper strength of 254 machines, about the equivalent of an armoured division. |
|
This is the radio equivalent of painting something a dark colour so that it cannot be seen by the eye at night. |
|
Modern radar systems perform the equivalent operation faster and more accurately using computers. |
|
Their name is the Irish equivalent of Priteni, an ancient name for the Celtic Britons, and was sometimes used to refer to the Picts. |
|
That is equivalent to approximately 3 billion urbanites by 2050, much of which will occur in Africa and Asia. |
|
Australia's equivalent to the rabbit, the bilby, was quickly pushed out by the rabbits. |
|
A formula equivalent to Heron's was discovered by the Chinese independently of the Greeks. |
|
The dipole is roughly equivalent to a powerful bar magnet, with its south pole pointing towards the geomagnetic North Pole. |
|
Each harmonic is equivalent to a particular arrangement of magnetic charges at the center of the Earth. |
|
A dipole is equivalent to two opposing charges brought close together and a quadrupole to two dipoles brought together. |
|
An alternative definition for the maximum potential intensity, which is mathematically equivalent to the above formulation, is. |
|
A submerged equivalent to the current South Sandwich Arc was relocated westward by the same spreading centre. |
|
The only equivalent in size are the neighbouring Diaz Ridge and the Falkland Escarpment. |
|
|
The figure for the United Kingdom is over 2 kilogrammes of carbon dioxide equivalent for each kilogramme of ammonium nitrate. |
|
The Welsh equivalent to Lyonesse and Ker Ys is Cantre'r Gwaelod, a legendary drowned kingdom in Cardigan Bay. |
|
In New Zealand, under the old system of Forms, Standards and Juniors, Sixth Form was the equivalent of Year 12 in today's system. |
|
They were shown on Ordnance Survey maps of the time under both titles, and are equivalent to the modern ceremonial counties. |
|
The radula is unique to the molluscs and has no equivalent in any other animal. |
|
Crocodilians also have the functional equivalent of a diaphragm by incorporating muscles used for aquatic locomotion into respiration. |
|
Depending on how a specific publication defines the Sangamonian Stage of North America, the Eemian is equivalent to either all or part of it. |
|
Traditional cultivars produce male blossoms first, then female, in about equivalent numbers. |
|
Increasing global interaction during this time saw an equivalent influence of other cultures into Western art. |
|
They may express the equivalent of an entire English sentence in a single word. |
|
Its Roman Rite equivalent is the Mass of the Presanctified used only on Good Friday. |
|
He suggested changing the definition of parallel straight lines to an equivalent statement that would allow him to prove the fifth postulate. |
|
A helical scan with a pitch of zero is equivalent to constant z-axis scanning. |
|
With the replacement of the rixdollar by the rupee in 1852, a shilling was deemed to be equivalent to half a rupee. |
|
On the decimalisation of the currency in 1869, a shilling was deemed to be equivalent to 50 Ceylon cents. |
|
Eunuchs had ranks that were equivalent to civil service ranks, only theirs had four grades instead of nine. |
|
These hunts were distinctive from hunts in other cultures where they were the equivalent to small unit actions. |
|
The Roman republic exacted tribute in the form of payments equivalent to proportional property taxes, for the purpose of waging war. |
|
Each second of error is equivalent to 15 seconds of longitude error, which at the equator is a position error of. |
|
These prizes, worth the equivalent of millions of pounds in today's currency, motivated many to search for a solution. |
|
|
This would be the equivalent of calling all the Kings of ancient Rome by the title of Caesar. |
|
In contrast, February, the equivalent of August in the northern hemisphere, has the least amount of sunshine. |
|
The city is roughly equivalent to the Province of Lima, which is subdivided into 43 districts. |
|
Chartered companies were usually formed, incorporated and legitimised under a royal or, in republics, an equivalent government charter. |
|
However, although in some countries and periods the rank of voivode was equivalent to a Western duke, it was not universally so. |
|
Similarly, the hock contains bones equivalent to those in the human ankle and heel. |
|
Catch demonstrate a Norman development while chase is the French equivalent imported with a different meaning. |
|
However in many cases there exist equivalent expressions that carry the same meaning as the modal, and can be used to supply the missing forms. |
|
For that reason, they exhibit the V2 word order of the equivalent direct quotation. |
|
Students who sit for the CAPE usually possess CSEC or an equivalent certification. |
|
In 1991, the Convention recommended parity in pay and benefits between clergy and lay employees in equivalent positions. |
|
The closest equivalent position in the Eastern Churches in 1911 was an Exarch. |
|
If it is a subordinate court, lawyers can use terms such as sir or any equivalent phrase in the regional language concerned. |
|
In lower courts, judges are addressed as sir, madam or the Urdu equivalent Janab. |
|
An equivalent to causing death by dangerous driving in Canada under the Criminal Code is Causing death by criminal negligence. |
|
In several Australian states, tribunals function as the equivalent of a small claims court. |
|
In cognitive linguistics, the notion of conceptual metaphor may be equivalent to that of analogy. |
|
The question was that of lay fee, which was the equivalent of secular lands, even though it may have been held in free, pure and perpetual alms. |
|
The precedence of a Lord Keeper of the Great Seal is equivalent to that of a Lord Chancellor. |
|
The broad misappropriation doctrine relied upon by the district court is, therefore, the equivalent of exclusive rights in copyright law. |
|
|
Normally the leader of the majority party becomes the prime minister, or an office of equivalent function, and selects the other ministers. |
|
The equivalent bill used by the House of Lords is the Select Vestries Bill. |
|
Given the bilingual nature of the Canadian federal government, two equivalent Canadian Hansards are maintained, one in French and one in English. |
|
In the Episcopal Church in the United States of America, the equivalent is General Convention. |
|
The kinetic energy can be accounted for by converting it into an equivalent head, the velocity head, and adding it to the actual head. |
|
It is the equivalent of an ingot of cast metal, in a convenient form for handling, storage, shipping and further working into a finished product. |
|
The atoms in the GB are normally in a higher energy state than their equivalent in the bulk material. |
|
In practice the hectare is fully derived from the SI, being equivalent to a square hectometre. |
|
The equivalent figures for 2007 and 2010 stood at 29th most deprived and 32nd most deprived respectively. |
|
Ancient woodland is formally defined on maps by Natural England and equivalent bodies. |
|
The limnology of reservoirs has many similarities to that of lakes of equivalent size. |
|
The equivalent routes in Scotland are Long Distance Routes such as the West Highland Way. |
|
Since pH is a logarithmic scale, a difference of one pH unit is equivalent to a tenfold difference in hydrogen ion concentration. |
|
Trees such as the pin oak, the shagbark hickory, the linden, and the sugar maple are the arboreal equivalent of the high school student council. |
|
In contrast, Calef and Weinshel suggested that somnophilia may be a neurotic equivalent of necrophilia. |
|
Comparing equivalent total absorbed doses, those delivered more slowly appear more dangerous. |
|
In this paper, we discuss whether every normal polytope is unimodularly equivalent to a face of some normal Gorenstein Fano polytope. |
|
The wall behind the cubbies is made of wheatboard, an environmentally friendly equivalent of plywood containing processed wheat. |
|
As the carbon equivalent increases, the depth of the chill decreases until the entire sample is gray, showing a zero chill measurement. |
|
Note that models that do not have the equivalent of the backstress have difficulties in modeling this phenomenon that takes place at zero stress. |
|