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176 Sentences With "equated with"

How to use equated with in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "equated with" and check conjugation/comparative form for "equated with". Mastering all the usages of "equated with" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In your book, cheating is often equated with sexual liberation.
Being gay should never be equated with sexual assault or pedophilia.
The female psyche has often been equated with an untamable wilderness.
During the Mughal Empire, fair skin was equated with beauty and wealth.
In my field, physics, greatness is often equated with aggressiveness and assertiveness.
Meetings are all about emotions and sharing stuff I equated with being weak.
Rashida Tlaib, for their criticism of Israel, which he equated with Iowa Rep.
Especially in a work environment where age in women is equated with fallibility.
ZB: But right now the conservative movement is equated with the Republican Party.
"The stigma of being equated with tobacco has many negative consequences," the group wrote.
As Quartz notes, a troll's hostility is usually equated with their status of anonymity.
Baths were rare, as was washing of hands and feet, equated with Islamic ablution.
Deep thoughts weren't one of those things we necessarily equated with Kyle ... until now.
And for some, defending coal has come to be equated with defending the country.
" "They don't want to be equated with the openly neo-Nazi and racist protesters.
There is some shade thrown at Sanders, who Brooks once mystifyingly equated with Donald Trump.
More gray matter, which consists mostly of neurons, is generally equated with greater brain health.
The upper half of the painting, full of fantastical forms, is equated with the windshield.
I myself, do not want to be equated with men, I want to always be me.
Even though physical intimacy tend to be equated with intimacy in general, not everyone's a cuddler.
In the last month alone, satanism has been equated with everything from mayonnaise to racial supremacy.
As a boy I wanted the opportunity to demonstrate physical courage, which I equated with manhood.
Good health is often equated with being a disciplined person, a responsible citizen, a worthier mother.
Clinton cannot be equated with her attempts to analyze her loss and decide her future actions.
But Trump would almost certainly veto any version of the legislation, which he's equated with socialism.
Burisma = Bidens -- He, like Volker, didn't understand that Burisma equated with the Bidens in Trump's mind.
Stock markets often serve as an economic scoreboard: Increasing stock prices are equated with economic victory.
In Berber and Beja cultures, the size of a nose ring is equated with family wealth.
Tempestuousness is equated with creativity because the movie can't be bothered with the intricacies of depicting creativity.
The mainstream media's "willingness" to circulate images of black people in distress is equated with public lynching.
This randomness is equated with the thermodynamic quantity called entropy—a measurement of disorder—which is always increasing.
The statement referenced Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence whom Trump equated with Confederate Gen.
But that didn't happen, and low oil prices are now equated with sluggish demand and general economic weakness.
Why does every attempt at female empowerment and safety-seeking get equated with castrating or otherwise "harming" men?
The nuanced community is often equated with begging and sex work, and being forced out of one's home.
It's a pretty sad state of affairs when that kind of clarity and daring is equated with departures.
For some lawmakers, "defending coal has come to be equated with defending the country," according to the Times.
But for residents of Kef, tree cutting, even in small amounts, has become equated with environmental destruction and corruption.
"Killing them, therefore, cannot be equated with killing normal human beings, or any other self-conscious beings," he writes.
"Mixed-race identity is often equated with this idea that we live in a post-racial society," Huering says.
"The swastika now simultaneously signifies both good and evil: a life symbol that is equated with death," they write.
Having space and allowance for messiness or innovation should not be equated with indiscriminately releasing anything into the world.
Because knowledge is equated with power, it's long been assumed that a public registry helps keep people— particularly children—safe.
"Jackie watched the way her mother comported herself which had to do with money being equated with power," says Taraborrelli.
But the conditions for critical teaching and learning are undermined when feelings are equated with reasons in call-out culture.
Look back to a few decades before the inception of PETA, and wearing fur wasn't always equated with animal cruelty.
While Trump should not be equated with Stalin on most issues, they do share a contempt for the free press.
As they do so, they nonetheless find themselves routinely equated with the very forces to which they are intramurally opposed.
"Citizens standing up for equality and freedom can never be equated with white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the KKK," he added.
"So there is some potential priming of this food equated with warm, fuzzy, safe, home feelings without conscious awareness," Rutledge said.
But in an environment of such profound distrust, where weapons are equated with power, no one side will voluntarily surrender them.
Local gods, sometimes equated with Greek and Roman ones, are depicted in Roman or Parthian or local style, or some combination.
It also put pressure on the new Iraqi government to serve Iranian interests, which came to be equated with Shia interests.
"Citizens standing up for equality and freedom can never be equated with white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the KKK," Cohn said Friday.
In a telephone interview, Mr. Shoval denounced all expressions of neo-Nazism as abhorrent and said nothing could be equated with it.
It did not take long for basketball players' walk from the car to the locker room to be equated with the runway.
"Citizens standing up for equality and freedom can never be equated with white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the K.K.K.," Mr. Cohn said.
In the 90s, and to some extent today, feminism is often mistakenly equated with man-hating, an idea that both writers resoundingly reject.
"Your name will always be equated with being a sex offender and rapist because that is what now defines you," one mother said.
In the B.J.P.'s rhetoric, being Indian is equated with being Hindu, and religious minorities are spoken of as if they were foreigners.
The influence of Frizzell's stoic drawl, liquefied syllables and tightly controlled ornaments is so pervasive that it's often equated with classic country style.
At this fateful point, the only way money could be brought into being was to borrow it, whereby money became equated with debt.
Logically speaking, there's nothing wicked about being fat, but in Rogers's world fatness is equated with malfeasance and corruption, or at least with foolishness.
A movie that is so often accused of being boring is unlikely to be equated with ruining a childhood, pushing this one's rank down.
Sanders' anti-Wall Street platform can become so great a focus for the media that it is, wrongly, equated with a pervasive "antibusiness" philosophy.
Statements by Trump are equated with comments and actions by celebrities (De Niro, Peter Fonda, Kathy Griffin) and the swearing of a congressional page.
As long as having a large family is equated with increasing social power, devoting one's life to motherhood will look like a religious duty.
Most Catholics seem to grasp a distinction that is a major part of Catholic tradition — that early abortions should not be equated with murder.
"Citizens standing up for equality and freedom can never be equated with white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the KKK," Cohn said in the interview.
"Citizens standing up for equality and freedom can never be equated with white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the KKK," he told the Financial Times Thursday.
It's a format so abridged and casual that botched grammar isn't necessarily equated with stupidity; it could simply be the consequence of haste or convenience.
Humpton saw "executive material" equated with management through "fear and intimidation," but knew that her proclivity for "engagement and inspiration" would lend themselves to leadership.
Open dialogue on mental health is especially a hurdle for men, particularly in rap, when masculinity is falsely equated with bottling up feelings of weakness.
The in-house studio is an interesting twist on the concept of native content — which today has largely become a term that is equated with advertising.
"Sexiness" used to be equated with bad taste — admittedly, in the present tense too — but it is now maybe considered, more than that, outside the zeitgeist.
Finding himself beset by impulses to cruelty and sexual domination, he ascribed them to Nature, which, after the eighteenth-century French fashion, he equated with God.
The friends I have who still work in offices inform me that their bosses insist they take the second option, that napping is equated with laziness.
On Tuesday, Buttigieg also used Trump as example of why age shouldn't always be equated with wisdom to beat back criticism of his youth and inexperience.
And we're reminded of the harsh truth that organized youth baseball, a sliver of Americana once equated with the flag and apple pie, has been largely corrupted.
The one commonality among the artist's diverse output was color, which is not necessarily equated with paint, but rather inherent pigmentation — of broomsticks, wire, or raw wood.
"Citizens standing up for equality and freedom can never be equated with white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the KKK," Cohn told The Financial Times at the time.
That belief is sustained by their larger image of the political cosmos, in which their high standing is equated with the well-being and survival of society.
"Citizens standing up for equality and freedom can never be equated with white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the KKK," he said in a veiled criticism of the president.
The stigma speaks to the inherent contradiction of the American dream within the context of the sex industry: Achievement is equated with cash flow, but promiscuity is shunned.
But I think they sort of put on the parade of it because they saw it as something that they really equated with their fascination with horror cinema.
Many athletes, Madigan says, don't take full advantage of easy days—and therefore may contribute to burnout and fatigue—by assuming a workout's success is equated with exhaustion.
In society today where being "special" is a desired notion, being a generalist is equated with the inability to become a specialist rather than a distinctive career choice.
If you tell someone that his sex life is no longer equated with illness and death, it is only to be expected that he will enjoy sex more.
But she knows firsthand how the word "strong" can be a euphemism for "too big," and how the goal of running fast is consistently equated with weight loss.
"Citizens standing up for equality and freedom can never be equated with white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the KKK," Cohn said in an interview with the Financial Times.
Early education used to be equated with babysitting, and a child-care center was considered just a cozy nest where working parents could safely drop off their children.
These aspects of globalization are often overlooked because the advocacy of interconnectedness has come to be equated with tolerance, while the resistance to it is identified with prejudice.
Yet with the mainstream media cowed or co-opted, Kurdish politicians behind bars and dissent equated with treason, the prospect of a free and fair vote is abysmally low.
I think that the fictionalized portrayal of women in prison can do damage if it's not equated with a real understanding of what's happening to real women and families.
The generational split is not an ideological split The generation gap among Democrats is often equated with the party's ideological split, but the latter doesn't consistently track the former.
Like Francie and Holden before her, Lucy, a street-smart, superlative basketballer vulnerable to the perils of approaching womanhood, is too carefully drawn to be equated with anyone else.
"Many of these accounts strongly pushed the narrative that all Muslims should be equated with terrorists and made the case that Muslims should be banned from Europe," he said.
But this is all to say that I partly feel this way because for so long, "whiteness" has equated with "normal," the status quo, assumed to be the default.
"With the drinks' clearness being equated with purity and health, they were all the rage for roughly a year or so before disappearing quietly from view," according to Bustle.
Meanwhile, Batman's father Thomas Wayne, a callous and wealthy mayoral candidate, was equated with Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam, who protesters accuse of being out of touch with the public.
As the ideology is often equated with misogyny along with other hateful viewpoints, it's interesting seeing the involvement and conviction of such a wide range of women around the country.
In her remarks, Ocasio-Cortez torched political moderation, which she equated with worshiping mediocrity, defended democratic socialism and took a question from Bill Nye, better known as The Science Guy.
ALEX GORSKY: Well, Jim, one of the most exciting parts of my job right now is to see the technology that is usually equated with California and the West Coast.
Finally, Brady's wife, Gisele Bündchen, a "foreign-born model," received an award from Harvard Medical School for her environmental advocacy and does not deserve to be equated with Melania Trump.
New norms of privacy, and a cultural shift in which shared spaces in cities became equated with demoralization and depravity, also helped put an end to these styles of living.
Yet rather than help you out, he has added a new obstacle: If you raise the topic, you are told you will be equated with a stepmother who traumatized him.
Just last week, YouTube suspended the account of a dad after he uploaded a video showing him playing a cruel joke on his kids that some have equated with child abuse.
Education in the Age of Outrage "When pain and suffering are equated with moral authority, the mission of higher education becomes an impossible one," says the writer of this Opinion essay.
CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - U.S. pastor Steven Anderson has been banned from visiting South Africa over his anti-gays views, which the country's home affairs minister on Tuesday equated with hate speech.
In the Sunday-night tweet, Mr. Trump was effectively vouching for the credibility of Mr. Pecker and his newspaper — whose name in the Trump era hasn't exactly been equated with accuracy.
The pope also declared that same-sex unions should not be equated with marriage, which may make some liberal Catholics think the pope didn't go far enough in his call for change.
"The number of reports of IT security incidents has increased but it is not to be equated with the number of cyber attacks," tweeted the BSI in response to the newspaper report.
But conservatives emphasized that they shouldn't be equated with the so-called alternative right, or alt-right, an umbrella term for the nebulous white nationalist movement that has been accused of bigotry.
"Bravery should not be equated with running toward the danger no matter what," said Maria Haberfeld, an expert on police training at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York.
As Kelsey Plum neared the N.C.A.A. women's basketball career scoring record during her senior season at the University of Washington, her game became equated with that of another prolific left-handed shooter.
There is as much disdain for what will be the area's first Citi Bike docking station, a symbol of gentrification, as there is for homeless shelters, often equated with blight and crime.
Male employees may have more social permission to be swift and direct, while women who approach a situation with a softer style are dismissively equated with being less effective, or even worse, weak.
Slapping the line on a cover is one thing, but choosing to perpetuate the ideal that good hair is only equated with straight, maybe blond, but, most importantly, white women, is a dangerous message.
"Citizens standing up for equality and freedom can never be equated with white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the KKK (Ku Klux Klan)," he said in an interview with the Financial Times on Aug. 25.
Concussions can hardly be equated with smoking, which kills 1,300 people a day in the United States, and The Times has found no direct evidence that the league took its strategy from Big Tobacco.
"All of the sudden, Title 13 gets equated with differential privacy — it's not," he said, adding that if you make a guess about someone's identity from looking at census data, you are probably wrong.
When fear for my family — black, migratory and therefore targets of the state — is equated with the mundane anxiety of a standardized test, I find it a relief to absent myself from the calculation.
Given that the label "Nazi" is an acronym for National Socialist German Workers' Party, it is somewhat of a puzzle why Nazi has not come to be equated with the "socialism" of communist dictatorships.
So not only was it a time of transition away from the "post-racial," colorblind era that some people equated with President Obama, but there was a palpable sense of anxiety in communities of color.
The period work's more xenophobic comments tally with post-Brexit Britain, even though they originate in their author's wish to awaken both Archie and his audience from the deadening anesthesia that Osborne equated with life.
Being different is good, but the point here is that Trump, and too many of the leaders of both parties, is focused on demonstrating "power," the exercise of which is seemingly equated with scoring a win.
We live in an age of absolutes, where health insurance is fallaciously equated with healthcare, where progressives disdain the private sector and put all trust in the federal bureaucracy while conservatives instinctively distrust the federal Leviathan.
The papal document, formally known as a Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation, is also expected to call for better programmes for marriage preparation and echo the synod's stand that homosexual unions cannot be equated with heterosexual marriage.
Giacalone argues that filming protesters out in public is fair game, and should not be equated with the spying on political groups that the department carried out in the 22013s that eventually led to the Handschu guidelines.
" Kim Sauder makes a similar argument, writing, "If the logic is that by framing Trump as having a mental illness makes him unfit for the presidency then the message is that mental illness is equated with incompetence.
One of the sticking points for employers seems to be that flexible work is equated with the one or two formats that they are familiar with — most often, letting staff work from home or work part-time.
Often equated with the devil because of the location of his realm, Saxra is not evil, though he does have demonic aspects, derived in part from the fusion of Catholic ideas of hell with ancient Andean beliefs.
And because the C.I.A.-sponsored units often use English during operations, their abuses are even more directly equated with the American presence, though claims that American agents have sometimes been on the missions have not been confirmed.
It is a ruling that will forever affect the social fabric of this country and reaffirm a constitutional morality in a time of deep social and political division — a judgment that can be equated with Brown v.
Fees are especially important to consider because the researchers find that a fund's expense ratio is "a more reliable predictor of future return performance than past performance," with lower expense ratios being equated with better future returns.
"There's no counter message," Richards said, explaining that Yusaf was likely told something similar by his peers, by his family, by movies, by the media, by the government: Trans women are equated with men everywhere in American society.
"Great Mother Birth" is painted by hand in a medium and manner enshrined in modernist art history; the two scrolls are printed, typewritten, cut, and pasted on a support equated with the preparatory, the transitional, and the ephemeral.
Either way, there's no mistaking the seriousness of intent underlying Young's agile scat singing, and not just because of his fortissimo capitalization of the here, an idea of immediacy equated with the ghostly, disembodied presence of the poetic voice.
Throughout much of social media's short lifespan — remember, Twitter only launched in 2006 and Instagram in 2010 — follower counts have been seen as a form of social currency, equated with credibility, influence, and, of course, actual money (i.e. #sponcon).
That a "leave" victory was so quickly equated with bigotry could also mean the public are more attentive to the racism around them, and victims, perhaps fearing this could be the new normal, more willing to report such incidents.
"Advisory Committee's Notes should not be equated with congressional committee reports and other items of legislative history," he wrote, explaining that the notes are part of the official package of recommendations that the Supreme Court eventually submits to Congress.
He said his "Sieg Heil!" tweet was not an endorsement of Nazism or fascist tactics, but was meant to mock Media Matters and its use of boycotts of advertisers of conservative voices such as Sean Hannity, which Lord equated with fascism.
Back in 20183, Dave Duquette attempted to bring a horse slaughterhouse to his hometown of Hermiston, Oregon, promising much-needed economic stimulus to the area, but local leaders balked at the prospect of the town being equated with a taboo industry.
Now, however, body positivity is more popularly equated with unretouched ad campaign images, brands that make clothing in a wider range of sizes, and a handful of plus-size models who have reached the highest echelons of the fashion industry.
At a time bigness is being broadly equated with badness, no one is perhaps more so equated than Facebook, the dominant global force in online friendship and the source of a relentless drumbeat of new probes into how it governs itself.
And so Modigliani, a half-Italian, half-French Jew growing up in a nation equated with Roman Catholicism (Vatican City wouldn't become its own state until nine years after Modigliani's death), was a cultural mixed bag from the get-go.
In the statement, the pope rejects same-sex marriage: We need to acknowledge the great variety of family situations that can offer a certain stability, but de facto or same-sex unions for example, may not simply be equated with marriage.
"I think there's a tendency to assume that the significance of the case is equatedwith the importance of the defendant," Vladeck said, warning against focusing too much on Manafort's indictment just because he was so central to the campaign.
Your second reason is that "the rate that might choke off dollar payments until they equated with dollar receipts at a time of recession might be a third or a quarter of the rate desirable in a time of commodity boom".
Wilder was born in 1867 in a log cabin deep in the Wisconsin woods to a mother of calm and steady temperament and this adventure-seeking father, whose larger-than-life character she equated with the eternal romance of self-reliance.
Derivative-driven, supposedly seamless finance capital has become so destructive and immoral as to bear comparison to—though not be equated with—the vast gulag of slavery that Calhoun defended and that Lincoln temporized about until well into the Civil War.
That's because a good winter coat is oftentimes equated with an new, expensive winter coat — that big-ticket purchase you make when you're at a place in your life when you can drop the equivalent of your current rent check in one go.
One can only wonder what McQueen's diagnosis meant to him as a queer man who came of age at the height of the AIDS crisis, a moment when gay men's bodies were equated with death and decay in the most punitive ways.
"We've even been compared to China," complained Pasquale Tufano of Ristorante La Vigna, piqued that the town's half-dozen pizzerias had been singled out and equated with a country whose capital, Beijing, announced its first-ever toxic smog red alert last month.
"All these questions come down to the big question of whether traditional views about sexuality are going to be equated with views about race in the Jim Crow South," said John Inazu, a professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis.
" Nixon should have kept her comments to whether or not she was for marijuana legalization, he said, adding, "it is insulting to my soul that the free labor that my ancestors gave to this country would be equated with the selling of marijuana.
In a paragraph that can be read several different ways, the pontiff writes: We need to acknowledge the great variety of family situations that can offer a certain stability, but de facto or same-sex unions, for example, may not simply be equated with marriage.
As Valdez, an indefatigable farmer with a warm expression, a lush mustache and a mule named Conchita, he became an avatar for the farmers who harvested Colombia's coffee beans and a positive depiction of a country that was often equated with terrorism and drug trafficking.
Masters such as Romare Bearden, Bob Thompson, and Alma Thomas, and even contemporary abstractionists like Jennie C. Jones, have bristled at the notion that authentic blackness must be equated with realism and that black art must be subject to sociological approval before being evaluated aesthetically.
"One of the most exciting parts of my job right now is to see the technology that's usually equated with California and the West Coast, whether it's AI, machine learning [or] robotics, ... more and more being integrated into health care," said Gorsky, the chairman and CEO.
The official said the government is expecting a backlash both from within the state bureaucracy and from rights activists who could liken the moves to the authoritarian era of former President Suharto, when loyalty to the state ideology was mandatory and equated with loyalty to the regime.
As a patriotic American, I am reluctant to leave my post... But I also feel compelled to voice my distress over the events of the last two weeks... Citizens standing up for equality and freedom can never be equated with white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the KKK.
Some atheists try to claim as one of their own everyone, dead or alive, who has ever thought twice about religion—and there's a bit of this slippage in Moore and Kramnick, where the religiously unaffiliated (the so-called "nones") are all equated with the unbelieving.
That said, I tend to think there is an instinctive—but misguided—tendency to overvalue "immeasurables," as if they should be equated with love or dignity or art when, in fact, they are as much a grab bag of data as more easily captured factors are.
By Thursday, though, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos — a man whose every latest decision is equated with doom for whoever is on the other side of the competition — announced his company would reach a goal of carbon neutrality by 2040, a decade ahead of the Paris Agreement goal.
Trump used language familiar to the "alt-right" and white supremacists when he bemoaned "changing culture" that would results from the tearing down of statues honoring confederate generals like Robert E. Lee, who Trump equated with founding fathers like George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, who were slave owners.
The reluctance of voters in both parties to embrace compromise speaks to the reality that many elected representatives face, where compromise is equated with failure or a betrayal of principle and there is little room to maneuver between a small but vocal number of hard-liners on the left and right.
Wilders, who campaigns on an anti-Islam, anti-immigrant platform, was acquitted of hate speech charges in 2011 for various remarks including calling for a ban on the Koran, which he equated with Hitler's' "Mein Kampf" and for saying that "Muslim criminals" should be stripped of their Dutch nationality and deported.
Art brut, originally coined by the French artist Jean Dubuffet to characterize art existing outside and in implicit opposition to the art establishment (and often equated with the art of the insane), is widely used by the Japanese government for public, artistic initiatives to support the physically and developmentally disabled.
A 1962 abstraction of silver and blue murmurs by Gaitonde, who is equated with Mark Rothko in some lazy Western formulations, hangs here next to a 16th-century Japanese scroll painting of a bird on a snowy branch — and, indeed, this Indian painter had copies of similar Zen works in his Mumbai studio.
Cohn, who was standing near the president in Trump Tower this month when Trump said there were "very fine people" on both sides of the demonstration that was sponsored by neo-Nazis and white supremacists, told the Financial Times in an interview that citizens standing up for freedom could never be equated with such groups.
"One of the most exciting parts of my job right now is to see the technology that's usually equated with California and the West Coast, whether it's AI, machine learning [or] robotics, ... more and more being integrated into health care," Gorsky, the chairman and CEO, told CNBC's Jim Cramer in a "Mad Money" interview.
Yet, as Love points out, the basic idea of taking care of yourself, which feminist scholar Audre Lorde theorized as a radical "act of political warfare," turned into something monetizable, and soon became equated with purchasing things—face masks, manicures, massages, and anything that promised the potential of making us feel better, if only fleetingly.
In India, a woman's chastity is commonly equated with her family's honor (the phrase that Hindi films deployed for years to talk about rape was "izzat lootna," or literally, "being robbed of honor"), so Leone, an unabashedly sexual creature who not only profited from but enjoyed her career in porn, has always been followed by fascination, confusion, and rage.
"Lack of high quality experimental evidence should not be equated with evidence that such interventions are ineffective and it is important that patients and consumers do not stop protecting their skin until better quality evidence emerges," lead authors Dr. Ingrid Arevalo-Rodriguez and Dr. Guillermo Sanchez of the Instituto de Evaluacion Technoloica en Salud in Bogota, Colombia told Reuters Health by email.
Indeed, analysts quickly speculated about the loopholes through which Mr. Netanyahu could slip free of his new commitment: dragging his feet on the promise to avoid interfering with a potential Trump peace proposal; arguing that changing circumstances made it no longer workable; or acceding only to the subtlest incremental applications of Israeli law to the territories, but nothing that equated with formal annexation.

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