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918 Sentences With "equates"

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

"Winning to him also equates to good, and good equates to God," she said.
The CME says that equates to a 47.8 percent chance.
Do you know how many people that equates to worldwide?!
That equates to an increase of about 1 million bpd.
The file size equates to 215 million Word documents.  224.
It equates to a person and not a targeting item.
This equates to 250 million bank accounts, the startup says.
That equates to a roughly 16x jump in training speed.
This equates to removing 1.6 million cars from the road.
That amount reportedly equates to 454 kilograms of crystal meth.
For NLand this equates to around 24 waves an hour.
For The Maschhoffs, the estimated loss equates to $100 million.
The belief is that racial disparity equates with racial injustice.
Such misapprehension equates compromise with failure, and incrementalism with surrender.
Everything that goes into it equates to a $200 razor.
That equates to about 400,000 additional parcels sorted per hour.
He did not quantify how much revenue that equates to.
That equates to about a 1% drop in expected revenue.
One of the jurors equates the experience to psychological torture.
That equates to a port price of $20153 a tonne.
Instead, he equates talking to crowds of admirers with exercise.
That equates to 65 percent of total global soybean imports.
In Summa Theologica, Thomas Aquinas equates the creature with envy.
That equates to $7,200 a year — or $600 a month.
Tucker equates the effect of that drug to car design.
That number equates to about 18.5 percent of registered voters.
Each $10 donation equals one entry, so $50 equates five entries.
The current art audience equates dazzle and busyness with aesthetic experience.
If true, this equates to roughly $500 billion worth of ivory.
At full travel tilt, that equates to 40 miles (64 km).
Mayo said the shortfall equates to $70 million of additional expenses.
More antennas typically equates to faster speeds and a stronger signal.
That equates to around $15.5 billion to $18.5 billion in tariffs.
This equates to nearly £1,600 per person above the UK average.
Alabama's abortion ban, as introduced, also equates abortion with the Holocaust.
It sometimes equates to a new kind of football common sense.
That equates to a range of $1.86 to $1.92 a share.
But makeup isn't the only thing that Jenner equates with beauty.
In computational terms, that equates to about 4.7 bits of information.
That time period roughly equates to late-term premature human babies.
That equates to $22018 per person, up from last year's $227.
He doesn't experience them, so he equates menstrual blood to wrongness.
First off, and most importantly, sharper handling equates to safer driving.
BBVA notes that its 39 percent stake equates to £167 million.
Berger equates his career to a sort of three-dimensional chess.
That equates to 220006 million viewers among the big four networks.
That equates to 22019,000 Nebraskans gaining coverage due to the ACA.
This equates to just over $3.5 million at Friday's bitcoin price.
The price tag equates to over 4,000 bitcoin at Friday's price.
In the state's view, support for traditional marriage equates with discrimination.
For them, acceptance of reality equates to a denial of faith.
The $2 difference equates to $12 million of savings per year.
That equates to sales of between $727.9 billion and $730.7 billion.
All too often, our culture broadly equates "environmentalism" with personal consumerism.
That equates to about 1% of food calories lost each year.
First, he equates our superior intelligence with our ability to persuade.
We believe this equates to a roughly 7% or more Adj.
This funding equates to almost $85033 billion across these appropriation levels.
Nichole equates the cheaper subscriptions with paying a museum entry fee.
No one honestly believes he equates voluntary immigration with involuntary servitude.
The amount remaining equates to about 60 days of world oil consumption.
This equates to the annual carbon footprint of over 2.2 million Europeans.
That equates to an average fill rate of 52,000 barrels per day.
But remember, too, that Trump equates wealth directly with success and importance.
That equates to about 300% of growth during that period, Tzuo added.
For context, here's what that equates to in the basketball shoe world.
In my mind, deleting these messages equates to erasing our entire relationship.
In practice this equates to about 1.6% of the funds' capital value.
Florida equates the rise of cities to the growth of popular bands.
Given the pledged reductions total 2129.696,211 bpd, that equates to 212019% compliance.
This equates to about $36.92 a share based on Monday's closing price.
That equates to about 2000 people killed by a firearm each day.
That equates to a paltry rise of less than 1% a year.
This equates to one-eighth of an average adult's recommended dietary needs.
And like them, Trump equates electoral fraud with black and brown voters.
"He thinks one equates with the other," one Republican congressional source said.
This equates to 2,000 to 4,000 such cases each year in Australia.
The current average hourly wage of $27.16 equates to $54,21625 per year.
His playoff career equates to essentially one full season of NHL play.
London's median weekly income is £713, which equates to £37,076 a year.
That equates to five Olympic golds and seven in the world championships.
This equates to around 115 new cases of bowel cancer every day.
That growth equates to high demand for American products, particularly pet food.
From what I understand, the total amount of the cuts equates to .
Microsoft equates the issue to a broken fuel gauge in a car.
This equates to higher speeds and greater protection in a contested environment.
That equates to $20 billion a year, a sign of its potential.
Given the pledged reductions total 814,000 bpd, that equates to 158% compliance.
" Connell responded to CNN, saying, "Everybody equates the IG report with me.
Its 450 ml capacity equates to slightly more than 15 fluid ounces.
Given the pledged reductions total 2128.9,2129.65 bpd, that equates to 211% compliance.
That equates to 7.8 billion pounds a quarter, according to Reuters calculations.
That equates to an $81.3 billion fall in market capitalization or value.
He equates the wheels on his chair to a pair of shoes.
Well, it's interesting, because your question equates innovation with being aggressive. Right.
"You might be working a lot of overtime now and pulling down money that that equates to $120,000 a year now, but in six months you might be pulling down what equates to $10,000 a year," Antokal said.
Add in the extra six months and this equates to $2000,218 of contributions.
That increase equates to about 400 additional workers leaving federal employment every month.
In terms of transporting animals, this equates to 22015 incidents per 210,2767 transports.
The 2018 loan default rate forecast equates to roughly $27 billion in volume.
The time between Borovik's trip and mine equates to roughly my life span.
Apple equates building a new version of iOS with building an encryption backdoor.
That equates to roughly 7,33 euros for every person in the currency bloc.
Given the pledged reductions total 812,000 bpd, that equates to 135 percent compliance.
He equates that mistreatment with the later accusation that landed him behind bars.
"That equates to numerous visits to hospitals, numerous procedures, numerous medications," he adds.
This equates to around 8523% of sector assets or 2.6% of sector equity.
That equates to roughly 33,23 euros for every person in the currency bloc.
That decline equates to the output of seven or eight vehicle assembly plants.
"All too often, our culture broadly equates 'environmentalism' with personal consumerism," Hegler wrote.
Together, the cost of the three films equates to nearly $3.50 per subscriber.
That equates to 20.5 hours a week and over 1,000 hours a year.
Each oven can hold 84 racks, which equates to 25 tonnes of sausages.
If he plays all 82 games that equates to about $35,000 per game.
That equates to a market capitalization of over $30 billion, by Breakingviews calculations.
Do you think that what you do equates to the wider city scene?
That equates to about 161,032 Americans dying each year because they are poor.
That $287 equates to about $1.36 a month on a 30-year mortgage.
For the uninitiated, real-estate syndication equates to crowdfunding for institutional-quality deals.
Given the pledged reductions total 1.17 million bpd, that equates to 133% compliance.
Unfortunately, the budget equates national power only with military strength and border security.
That equates to more than 600 million devices, from smartphones to traditional computers.
This equates to nearly 22012 million lives lost over the 23-year span.
OHL's market capitalisation is less than 900m, meaning 3% equates to around 27m.
Given the pledged reductions total was 2114,2129.57 bpd, that equates to 2129.68% compliance.
Renaissance Capital says this equates to 22014 per the dollar in today's prices.
The financing equates to around 7.0 times Ceramtec's €196m Ebitda, banking sources said.
If translated to the decibel Watt scale, that equates to something like 103 decibels.
Hypersonic flight equates to going Mach 5, or five times the speed of sound.
Its current listing price of $17.5 million equates to about $4,372 per square foot.
That equates to 3.05 million high school students, or 20.8 percent of this group.
That equates to 3.05 million high school students, or 7.23 percent of this group.
Better yet, just three minutes of charging equates to one hour of playback time.
This equates to $34.4 million of gross profits to AMC in the upcoming quarter.
Our $22 target equates to 213x and 13x our 2021 revenue and EPS estimates.
That equates to an average of one interest rate cut every three trading days.
However, sexism within our communities still equates Black achievement and liberation with male superiority.
This equates to around 0003%-25% of annual group pre-dividend free cash flow.
Officially, that equates to less than 100 parts per million, or less than 0.1%.
Those 30,000 new safety contractors equates to about one moderator for every 75,660 users.
Lewis recommends 64 ounces a day, an amount that equates to about eight glasses.
And in just Terminal 2150 alone, that equates to almost 13,21 bags an hour.
BY MY CALCULATIONS, EQUATES TO 120% PAYOUT RATIO FOR EARNINGS FOR THE COMING YEAR.
That equates to four extra meals per month at no extra cost to you.
Most companies realize that having a good leader in place equates to business growth.
"He said, she said" is still a convenient phrase that equates victims with harassers.
As such, commuting Manning's sentence in no way equates to giving Assange a pass.
Getting by equates with survival, which indicates a lack of a richer inner life.
That roughly equates to two and a half days for a 2,300-mile trip.
Microaggression training incorrectly and dangerously equates speech with violence and isn't backed by evidence.
For Mr. Cole, doing the least, it turns out, equates to achieving the most.
With three-month Euribor trading at around -0.22 percent that equates to -0.07 percent.
The latest official figure, 11.7 percent in 2016, equates to more than $30 billion.
It's about "the story of a young man from Ohio, a seemingly regular kid — being me of course — falling into the social media machine, building an audience, garnering false power through views which equates to money which equates to success," Paul says.
The length of his fingernails actually equates to the same length as a London bus.
The stock's 7 percent drop equates to a market cap loss of roughly $56 billion.
That equates to roughly 1 percent of the annual defense budget of the United Kingdom.
J. Colby Smith of New York Adorned equates the act to riding a roller coaster.
This equates to a 2.25 percent return on all spending when you redeem for travel.
It probably just equates to no visible scandals or conflicts that would interrupt blissful ignorance.
This equates to enough power to provide 2.3 million homes with electricity every single year.
That equates to an equity risk premium of seven percentage points, way higher than history.
As for the criticism of MMA's burgeoning senior division, Shamrock equates it with age discrimination.
It's not that NJ Assemblyman John Wisniewski equates sipping a caffeinated latte with guzzling alcohol.
LECV says driving a TX taxi equates to £100 in fuel cost savings per week.
Together, that equates to a 46.4 percent share of advertisers' total global digital ad spend.
Given the pledged reductions total 212019,000 bpd, that equates to 101 percent compliance. Feb. Jan.
This equates to a margin of 20 basis points over the 10-year futures contract.
That equates to $17.45 billion in revenue on the year, also a 40 percent jump.
Retailers employ or support 42 million people, which equates to nearly one-fourth of Americans.
The gas shortage equates to one tenth of Ukraine's daily consumption of around 200 mcm.
The increase equates to about 96,000 more passengers a day this season than last year.
Figure out what percentage of your paycheck that equates to and start contributing that amount.
That equates to a current loss of SFr4.1bn from its investment, according to IFR calculations.
This sea of 6,243 lobbyists equates to roughly 11 lobbyists for each member of congress.
A lot of companies are like Youzan, which equates long hours of work with success.
TRUFF's has partnered with (RED), pledging $25,000 which equates to 125,000 days of HIV medication. 
By detaching the scenes from their plots, ROKE equates the actors to dating app faces.
That equates to a multiple of 4.5 times sales at San Jose, California-based Cypress.
But too often the fashion industry equates boundary-pushing with creativity and provocation with inspiration.
But too often the fashion industry equates boundary pushing with creativity, and provocation with inspiration.
Each mini-keg holds 67 ounces which equates to roughly a six-pack of beer.
Ms. Zfat equates the importance of Wi-Fi branding to screen names 15 years ago.
This equates to a tax increase on businesses for the simple act of doing business.
That equates to both a big opportunity for drones and big hurdles in their implementation.
That equates to around a full probability of a 10 bps cut from the bank.
The figure equates to around 2.2 million barrels per day (bpd) loss for that period.
That equates to sales of between $727.9 billion and $730.7 billion, or above-average growth.
Also, evidence of how much Trump equates physical size and presumed athletic ability with strength.
In one year alone we saw 28503,22019 die — which equates to one every four minutes.
Said Tanya: "Everybody equates Nicole with being a domestic violence victim, which she was, beyond belief."
That equates to about 2.5 percent of the entire 30 million bpd distillates market, Hardy said.
This equates to 15.3 percent of wages and is split between the worker and the employer.
Some US$2.5bn of debt equates to around 7.5 times Nord Anglia's Ebitda, the sources added.
The 0003 high yield bond default rate forecast of 2% equates to $19 billion of volume.
"Chairman Pai equates closing the digital divide with addressing infrastructure availability in rural areas," Horrigan said.
The study equates productivity with quality of care, which doesn't necessarily translate to white-collar work.
In New Girl world, this equates to a joke, not something she's actually worried about. Okay!
The vote will require two-thirds of the House to pass, which equates to 434 lawmakers.
That is hardly to be sneezed at, since it comfortably equates to 1trn yuan in revenues.
"The judge sometimes equates the public interest with whether the public are interested," says Mr Maugham.
Adams had a breakout year, if you believe that usage and statistical effectiveness equates to value.
While that seems steep, it equates to a 75 percent probability the Golden Gate is shown.
That equates to an average 2.27 million people every day — up 2.5 percent from last year.
Millman equates it to the prop bets that fans do during events like the Super Bowl.
That equates to around 20 miles of range per hour of charging, according to Plugless' website.
He's a Californian, so his ideas all have the Western tinge that equates frontiers with futures.
"Everybody equates Nicole with being a domestic violence victim, which she was, beyond belief," she says.
The "Lylye of Medicynes" is 245 folios, which equates to 600 pages of word-processed text.
Some US$4bn of debt financing equates to around 6 times the unit's approximate €650m Ebitda.
In one month, the amount of produce grown in the Urban Cultivator equates to roughly $400.
For a person consuming 2,000 calories per day, that equates to no more than 200 calories.
Some 300m of debt equates to around 6 times Oasis' approximate £50m Ebitda, the sources said.
Daren Bakst, a fellow with the conservative Heritage Foundation, says the law equates to government overreach.
The number equates to a healthy but not worrisome 2.7 percent rate on an annualized basis.
That equates to $10,400 in tax savings compared with the proposed $12,000 standard deduction for singles.
That equates to $10,113 in tax savings compared with the proposed $12,000 standard deduction for singles.
That equates to six women being murdered every hour by someone they knew, the study found.
After all, high numbers mean popularity, which, in the virtual-capital market equates to investor attention.
The Arkansas ad claims that Republican support of Kavanaugh equates to support of men of color.
A fee of 1% equates to 37 million pounds a year or 101,000 pounds a day.
This equates into 2.7 billion women legally restricted from having the same job as a man.
But I was still shocked that they would support a message that equates progressives with terrorists.
That equates to about 40% of the pages the government had previously produced in the litigation.
This equates to 16.6 times its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) last year.
And she wants to please her girlfriend, a community organizer who equates art galleries with gentrification.
This equates to an additional $334 billion potentially invested in property over the next two years.
GM's record $12,000 profit-sharing per worker in 2017 equates to an additional $5.77 per hour.
He equates this effect to the thread of of light you see behind a shooting star.
Fruit Loops have 12 grams of sugar per serving, which equates to 44% sugar by weight.
Owning land equates to power now and then, and for men of color, the power to vote.
That equates to a dividend of 0.56 dirham a share, less than the market had been expecting.
That equates to 740 grams (225lb 2106oz) each day for every man, woman and child on Earth.
That equates to 740 grams (1lb 6oz) each day for every man, woman and child on Earth.
Mildly psychedelic, it smartly equates the actual painting and the illusory fish tank as hypnotic visual objects.
It gets the name from its rather modest 251-rupee price tag, which equates to about $4.
Now before we figure out how much urine that equates to, we need to make another assumption.
That equates to roughly a 80 percent chance of a 10-basis-point rate hike, analysts say.
On a loan with a month's term, this equates to an annualized interest rate of 90 percent.
It's a Retina Display, which, in this case, equates to a resolution of 2560 x 1600 pixels.
That's juxtaposed to GE's remaining liabilities, which Inch said equates to between $2111 billion and $2129 billion.
Its $1.1 billion of net income equates to an annualized return on equity of just 6.4 percent.
Some £450m of debt financing equates to around 6.5 times Civica's approximate £60m Ebitda, the sources said.
"In all, then, this equates to a 7 percent reduction in actual currency EBIT guidance," RBC said.
Still, how a "protégé of Migos" equates to actually being one of Migos I do not know.
The debt multiple relative to Fitch's NCF is 8.7x, which equates to a debt yield of 11.4%.
Leveraged loans totalling around 400m, equates to around 6 times SLV's approximate 65m Ebitda, the bankers said.
This number equates to $26 dollars in donated medicines from industry for every $1 spent by USAID.
The box of wine equates to four bottles, or 20 glasses of wine, according to the box.
That equates to two-thirds of the acquisition price and several times the roughly $340 million premium.
That equates to 18 percent of sustainable earnings, Davy Stockbrokers said, calling it somewhat lower than expected.
With 737 inmates on death row, that equates to a possible 30 who are innocent, he said.
This bottom 99%, which equates to roughly 784,080 publishers, averaged approximately 7,650 downloads each during the quarter.
Trump equates drug dealers to serial killers and passionately believes they should be given the death penalty.
Kane equates the exploration of another planet to the faith and risk taken by explorers discovering America.
The first forces her to confront Negan's fundamental humanity, and the second equates it to her own.
If you're afraid that warmth equates to added bulk, you won't have to worry in this case.
"What that equates to is 19 ships in 2019 were unavailable to go to sea," he said.
About 2.5 hours every week, which equates to 30 minutes a day for five days a week.
"  Snake"There's been lots of mythology that equates femininity with snake-like behavior in a negative way.
Learning equates to behavior in action, really practicing what you consume as information and transform into behavior.
Because if they don't, their opponents say their silence equates to tacit approval of what took place.
Some €2bn of financing equates to around 6.5 times Swissport's approximate €275m-equivalent Ebitda, the sources said.
Losing 30% on a high-tier home in the $2,000,000 range equates to a loss of $600,000.
Erdogan equates the Gezi protesters with Kurdish militants and those accused of launching the attempted coup in 2016.
The actual limit referenced by the linked research is 65 degree Celsius, which equates to 149 degrees Fahrenheit.
The leveraged loan financing equates to around 7.75 times CPA Global's approximate £145m-£150m Ebitda, the sources said.
According to Breath's website, 1 puff per second equates to the computer performing 1,000 hashing operations per second.
Some €1.7bn of debt financing equates to around 6 times the unit's approximate €3m Ebitda, the sources said.
None other than Stephen Hawking concluded, for instance, that absence of evidence essentially equates with evidence of absence.
One lot equates to 100 ounces of gold, worth about $130,000, and 5,000 ounces of silver, worth $87,000.
Though a return on tangible equity equates to a lower return on common equity, the principle is important.
"This (450 billion roubles) equates to 4.5 trillion roubles of unissued loans to the Russian economy," he said.
This miscalculation suggests a fundamental misunderstanding that equates a painting with its image, but more on that later.
The pounding "Hunger" equates starvation with a yearning to be society's—and God's—version of the perfect girl.
Somehow, all of this equates to Mindy eventually being labeled a "bad wife," and that's worth looking into.
But while the hourly wage translated into 41 Polish zlotys before the vote, it now equates to 34.
It equates being aroused by something weird with noxious policy platforms that seek to oppress and disenfranchise people.
Terms were undisclosed by TechCrunch understands from multiple sources that this roughly equates to an acqui-hire scenario.
The company claims to have built a talent pool of 30,000 plus people, which presumably equates to registrations.
In front of each eye is a 720p screen (with the two lenses, that equates to 1440p across).
All told, as of last year the annual tax increase on each Chicago family equates to about $6900,2628.
Some €1.1bn of debt financing equates to around 6.0-6.5 times Cerba's approximate €170m Ebitda, the sources said.
The offer of 13 million shares equates to 548 million pounds representing 27.7 per cent of the company.
"I think recessing the residents back from the street equates to a more balanced footprint," Ms. Selldorf said.
Once taxed and capitalized on a multiple of 10, that equates to about $4 billion in present value.
The bid, made at 18.76 euros per share, equates to a total of 17.1 billion euros ($20.1 billion).
Specifically, the study found that a firm handshake equates with being less shy, less neurotic, and more extroverted.
The economy is doing well, Americans are traveling more, and this equates with record numbers at our checkpoints.
A P/E ratio of 6900 equates to an earnings yield (E/P) on stocks of 2628 percent.
The price equates to 0.6 times book value, about half the average of the banking sector in Poland.
With the bulk of Zuckerberg's net worth sitting in Facebook stock, that equates to more than $3 billion.
The general thinking is that less time spent on Facebook typically equates to fewer ads seen on Facebook.
The writer equates her talent as a singer to her sex appeal, which is both demeaning and offensive.
That equates to just a fraction of the savings that hospitals touted as a benefit of their mergers.
In the United States, about 8.8% of the population remains uninsured, which equates to about 28 million people.
That equates to more than two million patients saved by advances in diagnosis and medical treatment since 1991.
Colorist Kate Reid equates pink hair dye to the sparkly lip gloss many of us loved as teens.
This equates to roughly 69% of dry natural gas production in the U.S. for 2018, the EIA says.
That equates to a loss of $975 million in short covering over the last month, S3 data shows.
Some 1.1bn of debt financing equates to around 6.0-6.5 times Cerba's approximate 170m Ebitda, the sources said.
That's part of why employees like Bennett feel confident that fastidious adherence to NRC guidance equates to safety.
A decline in the sow herd usually equates to a similar drop in pork output, industry experts say.
The latest offer equates to 1.5043-1.8130 Class C shares with a cash component of up to $14 billion.
CBS News reports that a life sentence equates to as much as 16 years, but it can be renewed.
She also equates America's current relationship with Big Health Insurance to being in a relationship with a crap boyfriend.
In Game of Thrones lingo, this all equates to the very high probability that these two characters will bone.
The ad equates O'Connor's "whoever the Democratic Party puts forward" line with an acknowledgment that he would support Pelosi.
Over the four-month heating season, 2.57 million tonnes per year equates to roughly 857,000 tonnes of aluminium output.
Some €570m of loans, including undrawn facilities, equates to around 6.5 times Faerch's approximate €80m Ebitda, the sources said.
This recipe yields 22 mini-burgers, but we'll let you decide how many full-size burgers that equates to.
The design team equates the Your Feed reading experience to the way people tend to peruse a printed newspaper.
There are numerous moments where the game equates the struggle of androids with tragedies like slavery and the Holocaust.
The actual number is a whopping 676 hours of originals, which equates to just over 28 days of content.
This recipe yields 22 mini-burgers, but we'll let you decide how many full-size burgers that equates to.
So the bill in one sense equates to adding a few more days of typical releases to the year.
That equates to a range of between 33,313.5 and 40,716.5 boepd, against previous guidance of 45,000 to 51,000 boepd.
This equates to one incident for every 1,205 flights, compared with one incident for every 1,282 flights in 2014.
The decline in July's annual sales pace from a year ago equates to the output of four assembly plants.
That equates to non-citizen voting in the 2016 election accounting for 0.0001% of the vote in these jurisdictions.
Some 1bn of debt financing equates to around 6 to 6.5 times Cerba's approximate 170m Ebitda, the sources said.
Real life is not so accommodating; having a good story in no way equates to being a good person.
Make sure you changed the number of points applied to your order to "0.01" (which equates to 1 point).
Public widespread knowledge, as well as debate of an elected official's actions or proposals, equates to influence over such.
That 30,000 meters number equates to 98,425 feet, and the pilot coasted to 103,000 feet before beginning his descent.
NASA said the estimated 21953-ounce sample size equates to about 30 sugar packets worth of dirt and rocks.
Graham, the author of "The Intelligent Investor," equates buying and selling stocks on a short-time horizon to gambling.
This move will eradicate half a billion small bottles each year, which equates to 1.7 million pounds of plastic.
The problem with this belief is that it equates female goodness with sacrificing one's sexual pleasure for someone else's.
That equates to light-duty vehicle sales worldwide going from one million in 2017 to 60 million in 2040.
The assortment is similar to what's available for in-store pickup, which equates to hundreds of thousands of SKUs.
It equates the mechanical energy exerted by the mass of an object with an equivalent amount of electrical energy.
Today, a federal minimum wage of $7.25 equates to annual earnings of about $15,080, assuming a 40-hour workweek.
This mind-set equates innovation exclusively with invention and implies that if you just buy the new thing, voilà!
Its history and its remote, nearly treeless location equates its very name with punishment of a violent, vindictive variety.
On an average weekday, the ferry carries 154 total passengers, which equates to 77 round trips, Mr. Schapiro said.
When completed, the indoor farm is to encompass more than 150,000 square feet, which equates to nearly 3.5 acres.
I had spent so long ascribing excessive alcohol consumption to youth and societal messaging that equates drinking and fun.
When I'm sitting still, I make the hourly rate for my area (this changes from city to city): $0.1275 a minute on Lyft, which equates to $7.65 an hour, and $0.13 a minute on Uber, which equates to $7.80 an hour — both of which are less than Florida's minimum wage of $8.46.
That equates to someone dying of a stroke every 4 minutes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Some €350m of debt financing equates to around 6.0 times Axilone's approximate €55m Ebitda, including undrawn facilities, the sources said.
To decode that a bit: The 500 millibar level he referred to equates to an altitude of about 18,000 feet.
Some people have argued that wearing blackface essentially equates another person's race or ethnicity to a costume or a joke.
However, General John Nicholson, the American commander of Resolute Support, says that equates to only about 133% of the population.
From an employer's perspective, reducing your employees' cost of living essentially equates to giving them a 30-50 percent raise.
We live in a world that worships productivity, and that equates our ability to work with our value to society.
That equates to per tourist spending growth of just 1.5 percent, compared with a 16.5 percent rise the previous year.
In this sense, Jackman equates his overarching goal with The Greatest Showman to Barnum's goal with his circus freak shows.
Preserving the indigenous way of life equates to preserving the forests in which they live, which brings benefits to all.
That equates to the sale of a lot of floating UFO lamps, neon alien socks, and green slime slush drinks.
And she equates feminism with "hating men," one of the most pervasive and untrue stereotypes of feminism as a whole.
Some €570m of debt financing equates to 6.5 times Faerch's approximate €70m-€80m Ebitda, including undrawn debt, the sources said.
The "my world" phrasing happens throughout the movie, and in the end Clark equates her and his life on Earth.
The book often equates richness and royalty with morality, which anyone alive on earth knows is not how it goes.
There's been a 4 percent uptick in total global users (which equates to 121 million people) since just this April.
Equities reaching new highs equates to "good things" for U.S. business profits and employment, one analyst told CNBC on Thursday.
In the UK, almost one in every 100 people has the condition — which equates to one percent of the population.
This equates to total debt/consolidated EBITDA of 4.5x in 2017, up from BAT's 2015's 7503x and 2.8x, respectively.
The Chinese offer of 71 Norwegian crowns ($8.51) per share equates to about 10 times the company's forecast core earnings.
One prevailing theory is that Trump's willingness to "tell the truth" resonates with a demographic that equates honesty to boorishness.
Monzo's had 1.6 million customers in its fiscal 2019, meaning its revenue equates to a paltry £63 ($7.2) per customer.
Collectively, Americans miss 113 million workdays every year because of migraines, which equates to about $13 billion in productivity losses.
A tonne of hard coal equates to roughly 20153 mmBtu of thermal energy, and a tonne currently costs around $51.29.
Dark black skin equates rudeness, light skin black girls think they are better than everyone, and dark Asians are dirty.
What a sad state of affairs when this demographic equates a few extra dollars in their pockets with job success.
That equates to approximately $393 billion in mobile ad revenue for Twitter in 2017, down from $1.21 billion in 2016.
" Then he adds, "Also, that's what Domino enjoys so he equates it as much as he likes sweet potato pie.
The trajectory is uneven, but equates to an annual rate of emissions cuts of 3.7 percent with 1.33 percent growth.
But we are equally responsible as a culture that can seemingly never get enough and that equates more with better.
In a sparkling and powerful introduction, Brooks equates the shortcomings of Western culture with his own failings as a husband.
It equates to an area larger than one and a half soccer fields, being destroyed every minute of every day.
That equates to nearly 3 billion fewer birds today than there were when I was born, just 49 years ago.
The American Dream often equates success in life with homeownership, no matter what you have to risk to achieve it.
Twenty-five million workers equates to 22020 million families, which in the larger picture is closer to 22018 million citizens.
Therefore, treating the conditions, it said, would save national income per head by 5 percent — that equates to billions worldwide.
Spread across more than 100 live games, that equates to an average of only a few hundred thousand per match.
The missing 20133 percentage points equates to roughly 2.4 million would-be households, according to an estimate released this month.
Foreign investment equates to about 63 percent of Britain's GDP, roughly double the foreign stake in French or German business.
He's heralded by right wing figures throughout Europe, particularly when he equates migrants to terrorists threatening to invade his country.
Barclays is leading the financing, alongside Goldman Sachs and RBC, which equates to around 4.5 times Young's approximate £70m Ebitda.
That equates to a loss of more than 150,000 gestational days annually in the United States from 1969 to 1988.
This equates to roughly $7,85033 per year, which is a substantial sum for many families, particularly in upstate New York.
Even a 20 percent reduction in this work force over the next 15 years equates to a million lost jobs.
Over a 40-year career span, this equates to $977,720 in lost wages, according to the National Women's Law Center.
The dividend equates to a 1 billion pound payout for investors that includes a 600 million pound windfall for taxpayers.
Pompeo doubled down on this point, arguing that liberating of 99 percent of ISIS territory equates with the group's defeat.
"I wanted to highlight the misconception I saw throughout the literature that equates contraceptive use with pregnancy prevention," she said.
This equates to 900,000 to 1.5 million more searches than expected, according to the report, published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine.
The buds' 4GB of storage roughly equates to 1,000 songs, and they're Bluetooth enabled so you can make phone calls, too.
It's just that the internet currently runs on this economy of attention that equates eyeballs on things to content that's good.
Five atmospheres equates to about 40 meters of water resistance, but I don't know if I'd go SCUBA diving with it.
Economic muscle at home is of profound importance to Asia, which equates economic strength with security and the projection of power.
That equates to some 331,370 barrels of oil per day, out of roughly 1.75 million barrels pumped daily from the Gulf.
This famously caused a gaming community firestorm around the trope that equates female "strength" to forcing them to survive sexualized violence.
Assuming 40% gross profit margin for iPhone and a 10% tariff equates to ~$1.5B in OP impact or ~$0.33 in EPS.
That equates to 220,000-260,20123 bpd, about 5 percent of Rosneft's output and a quarter of China's monthly imports from Russia.
And while the original purchase was at nearly 10 times EBITDA, a billion pounds now equates to more like 8 times.
The initial sale of stakes, if it raises 200 million euros, equates to around 0.5 percent of Croatia's overall public debt.
"That equates to an extra half million dollars in annual sales," said the restaurant's general manager, Corey Neel in a statement.
According to the IFPI, every Spotify user equates to about $13 the company kicks back to the music industry each year.
This equates to a more than 21750x annual revenue acquisition multiple including the haircut but likely closer to 21000x without it.
By portraying women like this, the audience is to infer that being fabulous and free equates with being troublesome and dangerous.
That equates to 10.6 percent of the turnover of Target 2, through which bank payments in the euro zone are routed.
Some £550m of loans equates to leverage in the high 6s, based on an approximate Ebitda of £70m, the sources said.
That equates to 3,677 bottles of vino—44 percent of which were Welsh and English wines—and 53 bottles of spirits.
This equates to 28,000 Americans dying annually, which is more than traffic accidents or the second leading cause of accidental deaths.
About 10% of the U.S. population lives with a rare disease or disorder, which equates to about 30 million people nationwide.
That equates to some 319,523 barrels of oil per day, out of roughly 1.75 million barrels pumped daily from the Gulf.
Youth equates to inexperience, and so also to nerves and anxiety and all the mistakes and missteps that come with that.
This equates to one-third of the world's population carrying excess weight, fueled by urbanization, poor diets and reduced physical activity.
That equates to returns of 6% and 16.9% over the past month respectively, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch data.
With the index essentially flat for the year, that equates to around a 12 percent gain over the next 8 months.
The dominant discourse in climate change and energy transitions equates well-being to G.D.P., and we need to move beyond that.
Chief Financial Officer Greg Smith said its backlog of about 5,700 commercial aircraft equates to more than seven years in production.
That equates to some 323,760 barrels of oil per day, out of roughly 1.75 million barrels pumped daily from the Gulf.
The haul equates to more than 4.1 million ecstasy tablets, with an estimated street value of A$145 million ($109.95 million).
He equates religious freedom with freedom of conscience, and believes agnostics and atheists should enjoy the same civil rights as monotheists.
The league projects that a 6,000-8,000 capacity range will be ideal, which equates to the bottom tier of most stadia.
"Our tax now equates to a quarter of our gross turnover per month and it's only going to grow," he said.
Every Floridian, Democrat or Republican, knew that it was simply wrong, and his decision to double down equates to political malpractice.
That equates to an area of rainforest larger than one-and-a-half soccer fields being destroyed every minute each day.
ICAO's cultural DNA equates civil aviation with peace-building, and a tightly knit group of airlines and regulators supports that reflex.
Bryant appeared in 220 career playoff games, which equates to more than two and half seasons of extra wear and tear.
That equates to a 0.04 percent to 0.13 percent rise in the active military's $6.27 billion in annual health-care expenditures.
The unifying theme of it all is an anti-humanist mindset that equates any difficulty or need to a moral failing.
This type of toxic masculinity equates toughness with power and emotions with weakness, leaving men with no outlet for their shame.
A new CEO equates to an assessment of how best to position the company to perform today and deliver for tomorrow.
The estimate equates to a range of $727.9 billion to $730.7 billion being spent over last two months of this year.
If you think you might need something else from Best Buy (a Switch game, maybe), that basically equates to $30 off.
FHN estimates run-rate cost saves of $65 million annually which equates to roughly 30% of CBF's existing core expense base.
Spencer said Google removed 3.2 billion ads that violated its policies, which equates to more than 100 bad ads every second.
That equates to an area of rainforest larger than one and a half soccer fields being destroyed every minute of every day.
That equates to 390% of developed markets GDP, with most of the increase driven by a sharp lift in public sector indebtedness.
Considering the menacing music used when someone equates "ascension" and the Farm baptism, we're supposed to make the speculative Gargoyle King connection.
That equates to one billion liters of drinks, which were produced by the roughly 4,000 people THP employees in its home country.
That equates to growth of 43 percent, for a total 63 million members, according to the figures from Consumer Intelligence Research Partners.
The film uncomfortably equates beauty with virtue; the primary female villain, Dr. Poison (Elena Anaya), is badly scarred and hides her face.
The World Bank says better performance in the "Doing Business" rankings generally equates to lower levels of income inequality and reduced poverty.
That equates to $2000 of profit per share on an adjusted basis; analysts had expected a loss of 46 cents per share.
Basically, Uber says, your daily commute equates to time wasted, even in an autonomous car that theoretically requires you to do nothing.
There is nothing in losing, either, that equates in any real way to loss as we know it out in the world.
That means they are stuck in a perpetual cycle of poverty as this often equates to up to 20% of their income.
Gaga isn't reinforcing the idea that going makeup free somehow equates to authenticity or that we're finally seeing her true self, though.
Specs-wise, the Switch pairs a 1,020MHz quad-core CPU with 4GB of RAM, which equates to 1 teraflop of graphics power.
Unfortunately, there's no way to change the in-game units in Pokémon Go. You could always remember that 1 kilometer equates to .
Its settlement equates to 5003% of the related GBP25 billion RMBS exposure, higher than the average of 10% for the other banks.
But to process a full 12-megapixel image snapped by a modern smartphone, that equates to about 4.7-seconds of number crunching.
You could travel about 6 miles on a single charge, which equates to riding for about 40 minutes straight at top speed.
As part of the proposed deal, Lampert has said he is aiming to buy 425 stores, which equates to roughly 45,000 jobs.
In a world, that often equates cock size with virility, the implicit slogan "bigger means better" frequently materializes in men's fragile egos.
"This equates to more than 203,000 people quitting, not relapsing or not starting to smoke during that period," the WHO pointed out.
That equates to roughly 377,117 barrels of oil per day, out of the roughly 1.75 million barrels pumped daily from the Gulf.
"There's a lot of discomfort with the term sexual addiction, because it equates it to drug and alcohol addiction," Dr. Coleman says.
Fitch assumed a 100% default on uncovered TRF positions - positions lacking collateral - which equates to holders failing to honour 40% of losses.
Roughly translated, this equates to the Gross Domestic Product of Switzerland – or more than the GDP of every country outside the G2628.
In a new video released by NRATV Thursday, host Colion Noir equates demands for new gun control legislation to censoring press freedom.
The 68 percent increase in low-cost transatlantic capacity equates to a 5 percent market share, up from 3 percent last year.
In addition, wild Alaskan salmon at Costco is $32.99 for 3 pounds, which equates to $3503 per pound or $0.69 per ounce.
Some €800m of debt financing equates to around 6.5 times Constantia Labels' expected €113m Ebitda, including undrawn debt, the banking sources said.
It would be difficult, for example, to say what the activity of 45 million accounts equates to in traditional box office terms.
The reality is the missed checks plus the interest earned on that money equates to the additional sums earned by delaying retirement.
All that extra weight equates to, maybe, a few hours (I got almost 12 hours of battery life with full screen brightness).
Promising a spiritual journey through a series of different Tetris themes, Tetris Effect frequently equates "vaguely ethnic traditional cultural objects" to spirituality.
That equates to a somewhat higher net loss margin compared with Oscar's $205 million loss on $426 million of revenue in 2016.
Party propaganda now even equates Mr. Xi to a Confucian patriarch who runs the country as if it were his own family.
"[It] equates those that criticize Islamism — the radical politicized interpretation of Islam opposed by most Muslims — with bigotry toward Muslims," he said.
"From a disability perspective, the market equates to 1.3 billion people and has a spending power of $1.2 trillion," Ms. Burke said.
That equates to two thriving divisions and one in need of fixing, although with a strong franchise in the power-generation business.
That equates to a roughly 20-35% drop in take-home pay, depending on how many hours the flight attendants normally work.
Assuming 12 weeks of work during the three months following passage of the corporate tax cuts, this equates to a $75 increase.
That is what the Native headdress equates to: Chiefs went to battle and earned it, much like the medals military veterans earn.
The Syrian government portrays the conflict as an international conspiracy to destroy the country and equates all opposition with foreign-backed terrorism.
In the warmer conditions, the snapping was 20 decibels louder, which equates to being ten times as loud, explained Wood Hole's Mooney.
A compounded total return of 33,554% from 1994 to 1999, which equates to about 220% a year — a true market-conquering spectacle.
"The social conversation so often equates rural America or the white, working class with men in factories wearing tool belts," she said.
L * Offer price has been set at 160 pence per share which equates to a market capitalisation of £240.0 million on admission.
This equates to 10 fewer cases of coronary heart disease among vegetarians than in meat-eaters per 1,000 people over 10 years.
This equates to more than two billion watts of power, which is comparable to a large and modern nuclear or hydroelectric plant.
Nagy's novel roguishly equates international brinkmanship with interpersonal relations, an analogy that underscores the ways in which both can abjure immutable truths.
That equates to 15 percent of its reserves, which tumbled to $16.5 billion in February from around $36 billion before the uprising.
The makers of the game say that one person playing the game for two minutes equates to some five hours of traditional research.
That number equates to roughly 10 percent of the total working population of those countries: Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
She equates it to exercise — just as you'd make staying physically active part of your every day health, seeking pleasure should be too.
Employees are given 20 hours of unpaid time off per quarter, which equates to about two and a half shifts for most workers.
Lipow said Chinese oil demand is "significantly down" and consumption has fallen around 20%, which equates to about 3 million barrels per day.
If you read an average of say 217.95 pages an hour, that equates to about 218 cents of royalties per hour of entertainment.
Like many human beings socialized in an environment that equates weight and worth, I struggled with my self-esteem from a young age.
For those too lazy to whip out a calculator, that equates to way more than a few days — that's a 47-year layover.
Add in beautiful artwork and options to compete or cooperate with the other fighters you encounter, and Absolver equates to one fantastic experience.
With 319 million monthly active users, that equates to roughly 48 million active bot accounts on Twitter, more than the population of California.
The decency pledge is a bare minimum; it equates to being the tallest bonsai, and in the land of Redwoods, that's not enough.
She — being a lady of aspiring luxury — joyfully accepts the check and immediately equates the monetary value to 150 pairs of Jimmy Choos.
I guess that kind of equates to shedding your ego and shedding judgment and shedding shame, and just living presently and moving on.
First, she equates craft with unadorned necessity – the floor on which I was standing was made of planks fitted together, stained and varnished.
This equates to 0.6 percent average annual growth from 2015 to 2021, below the 20213 percent average yearly growth over the past decade.
"Hillary Clinton confronts her flaws during the latest Democratic debate Setting the pace"It equates to roughly one mis-statement every five minutes.
The plan equates to a payout ratio greater than 100% of 1H17 annualized earnings compared to a payout ratio of 99% in 2016.
In terms of dollars, that equates to an average physician practice spending $83,000 every year on claims and billing rather than patient care.
President Tayyip Erdogan, who favors consumption-led growth and whose status was reinforced by Friday's dramatic events, equates high borrowing costs with treason.
Other cities earn a relative score, where a one-point increase or decrease equates to a 1% change in the cost of living.
Victoria Bachan, Manor and CompanyPartner, equates getting nominated for a Shorty Award to that of a Golden Globe or Oscar for digital media.
Assuming 2,000 hours of work in a year, that equates to a $2023,420 increase to date, well-short of the $4,000-$9,000 promised.
That equates to an increase of about 1 million bpd, but the latest data shows they are some way from achieving that target.
"I always find it funny when I hear the term 'women's issues' because that term equates to birth control and abortion," she said.
That equates to women earning $80,000 less for doing the same work as men over a 40-year career, according to the report.
Assuming that and ignoring tax effects, the $6 trillion plunge from profit to loss equates to a nearly $9 trillion reduction in revenue.
In a society where physical beauty often equates to sex appeal, the idea of sapiosexuality has been quietly gaining traction in recent years.
Their nominal value equates to nearly a third of ERB's total assets of 4.97 billion crowns ($206.23 million) at the end of June.
Lazi falls in love with her slightly older female classmate Shui Ling, a love she strains to resist and equates with a crime.
Cloud platform as a service and cloud infrastructure as a service revenue came in at $415 million, which equates to 28 percent growth.
House Democrats in Minnesota won the cumulative House vote by 12 points, which equates to an over 20-point over-performance by Klobuchar.
That's a staggering number that equates to 174 deaths everyday, just short of the number of casualties on 9/11 every two weeks.
That equates to an increase of about 1 million bpd, but the latest figures show they are some way from achieving that target.
The pay gap between black, Asian and minority ethnic graduates and white workers with degrees is 10%; which equates to £1.93 ($2.10) an hour.
While just 15.5 percent of U.S. adults smoked in 2016, that equates to about 38 million people, according to the agency's most recent data.
That only equates to a small fossil-fuel power plant, but has potential to expand as storage becomes cheaper and generation becomes less centralized.
Typing is one of those things that's oh so subjective; but generally, more travel in the keys equates to a more satisfying typing experience.
The leader researcher, Mirko Kovac, equates the drone with Darwin's bark spider, an arachnid that can shoot a web "25 meters" in any direction.
The government seizes on the word "programmed" in those cases and superficially equates it to the process of creating new software. Opp. 210–19.
BAML and Morgan Stanley have provided a staple financing totaling around €630m, which equates to roughly 5.5x Allfunds' approximate €115m Ebitda, the sources said.
Exports to China amounted to NZ$12.1 billion ($8.67 billion) in the year to June, which equates to 17 percent of New Zealand's exports.
If we look at the restaurant industry broadly, which makes up a $490 billion market, the food delivery opportunity equates to just 43 percent.
"Winning a bidding war when it comes to acquiring biopharmaceutical companies almost always equates to way over-paying," wrote Tim Anderson, an Bernstein analyst.
The loss equates to roughly the same number of Americans as die every year from preventable medical errors: 27,29 to 22016,000, the researchers say.
Adding those to the 14 cards they revealed a couple weeks ago still just equates to a sliver of the 135 incoming cards, though.
They have 7.6 million combined Part D members, according to the latest federal data, which equates to about 17% of Medicare's Part D enrollment.
Mr Pollack estimates that the holdouts' claim, including accrued interest, now amounts to 400% of the principal, a figure which equates to $9 billion.
This roughly equates to a leverage target of 1.75x - 103x using Fitch's methodology of 8.0x gross rent expense or 2.3x at the mid-range.
So when they attempt to take a big, gooey, melted-cheese bite, all they get is hollow breading — which basically equates to eating air.
This represents a 77% saving on the list price and equates to a saving of over £300.00 over the three years of the deal.
While that equates to the calories in a small cookie, Gottlieb says, the impact compounded over weeks and months can deliver a large benefit.
More demand equates to higher prices — and investors are already paying sky-high prices for assets that are yielding peanuts or nothing at all.
And altitude equates to extra energy and speed in a fight, because the higher pilot works with gravity instead of against it while attacking.
This equates to an increase in risk of a 5%, 17% and 41%, respectively, compared with people who slept the recommended amount of hours.
Critics, including some British lawmakers and academics, say the country would be overpaying at that minimum price, which equates to double current market levels.
You get the base game and its expansions Blood and Wine and Hearts of Stone, which equates to almost 200 hours of possible gameplay.
This equates to a nearly 2 percent stake in the company, which would be vested every quarter over a four-year period, Aurora said.
In "Grass," the third Merrill song, the poet equates smoking a joint, a cheerful "inch of green," with the burning-up of our planet.
Over a lifetime, that equates to an average of two years spent feeling gross AF. And that's only if you're hanging once a month.
Merlo said CVS will keep $300 million worth of drug rebates from pharmaceutical companies this year, which equates to about 3% of its earnings.
Ali nipping Tyler's gross, possessive behavior in the bud is A+, but it's not enough in a film that equates female sexuality with villainy.
That equates to around $46 billion worth of business at list price, which is generally in excess of what the plane actually sells for.
While religious activity may be an essential part of people's lives, the assumption that social distancing equates to spiritual estrangement is up for debate.
According to the most recent data, America spends $13 trillion on health care, which equates to nearly 1 in 5 dollars of total GDP.
For her part, Ms. Distefano, who has received six-figure commissions for her handcrafted work outside the Met, equates cost with rarity and craft.
Banks will make additional fees of 1-1.5% if they sell debt into the institutional loan market, which equates to roughly another US$60m.
The central bank is tasked both with maintaining an economy at full employment and price stability that officials believe equates to 2 percent inflation.
Under the executive order, if a town board, county official or mayor declines — or neglects — to make a decision, silence equates to a veto.
Over the course of the power purchase agreement, this equates to enough electricity to power nearly 670,000 homes in Europe, according to the company.
Selling at HK$27.22 a share equates to about 25 times next year's expected earnings, in line with the 10-year average forward multiple.
The Indians played 15 postseason games, and Miller worked 19 ⅓ innings — a pace that equates to almost 210 innings across a 162-game schedule.
The bombardment continues, enduring ongoing criticism for what NGOs and aid groups say is a disregard for civilian deaths that equates to indiscriminate warfare.
It deals with the introduction of the Punisher (Jon Bernthal), a man who's so scarred by personal trauma that he equates justice with death.
Bizarrely, Coca-Cola equates handing out their sugary products with the start of the cherished holiday season, which has nothing to do with fizzy drinks.
Building up India's initial crude storage requirements equates to 220,000 barrels a day (bpd) of tanker demand, according to a report by Braemar ACM Shipbroking.
The HKD7.1 billion consideration equates to a substantial price/carrying value of 12.4x and may be driven by higher Chinese demand for offshore insurance products.
Pre-existing conditions protections When Stephanopoulos asked the President whether his drive to overturn Obamacare equates to abandoning those with preexisting conditions, Trump denied it.
While that position tends to mean stopping fires in 2018, in Montag's society, the gig equates to starting fires the moment anyone sees a book.
According to Greenpeace, an estimated 12.7 million tonnes of plastic enters our oceans each year, which equates to a "truck load of rubbish" per minute.
"I always say you consume everything that is on your lips, which equates to 4 kg of lipstick in a lifetime," says founder Mathilde Thomas.
The estimated value of the food loss was $161.6 billion and equates to 141 trillion calories wasted, or 1,249 calories wasted per person, per day.
Unfortunately, Kerry's "floodgate" comment wrongly equates collaboration with designated terrorists (which JASTA addresses) with conduct to protect our national security (which JASTA does not address).
This only equates to a small fossil-fuel power plant but it has potential to expand as storage becomes cheaper and generation becomes less centralized.
Each day thousands of people partake in the custom, which equates to approximately $2200,000 a week and almost $1 million a year in collected coins.
But in dollar terms, the rouble's 20213 crash means the $22021 billion market in 22016 equates to just over half of the market's 21.7 volume.
This equates to about three-quarters of Krivenchik's monthly salary as a watchman at a granary, but he does not like to hunt year-round.
Unlike Williams, I don't believe that achieving a universal level of success necessarily equates to being a sellout, a point he has made about Hart.
Other hosts, however, need to try harder to stand out among China's fast-growing number of streaming platforms where celebrity status equates to instant profitability.
Journalist Sarah Posner writes that the movement equates capitalist ideology with Christianity in order recruit the poor as foot soldiers for a conservative culture war.
The Dallas County Sheriff's Office, for example, handles federal detainment requests on a case-by-case basis, a practice Abbott equates to a sanctuary policy.
If there is any point at which I bristle at Manguso's lifelong enthusiasm with being brief, it is that she regularly equates excess with vulgarity.
To put that in context, 500 Megabits of data equates to about 35 hours of surfing the web but would support only limited streaming video.
As many as 3.4 million Romanians have left the country since 2007, when it joined the EU, which equates to 17% of the country's population.
Every 10 percent increase in year-over-year retail prices equates to a 0.8 percent decline in gasoline demand, by one trading house analyst's estimate.
Ameriprise estimates that every 2000-cent change in average gasoline prices over the course of a year equates to about $240 billion in consumer savings.
This equates to roughly 1.5x-2.5x of Fitch's supplemental adjusted net leverage calculation, which nets a portion of offshore cash against debt in calculating leverage.
China recently crossed the 50 percent threshold; more precisely, 53.1 percent of its population is now online, which equates to 731 million Chinese internet users.
According to its website, the most valuable CryptoDog costs about 99,998 in Achain tokens, which at the time of writing equates to nearly $18,0070 USD.
That equates to a $3,000 pay bump for the top-paid employees in the Trump Administration, compared to those in the Obama Administration last year.
And, unsurprisingly given his organization's name, "Venture for America," the book largely equates creating value in overlooked parts of the US with starting businesses there.
"She equates not using science, and not using facts, with being open-minded," said health researcher and author of Is Gwyneth Paltrow Wrong About Everything?
The loss in sales equates to 21625 percent of the previously estimated $2900 billion the industry expected in 220006 annual sales, according to the association.
Helena equates their fundraising process to more of a crowdfunding approach than a traditional VC round, with over 10 funds and 100 individual investors contributing.
Fun-ish feline fact: The first 2 cat years are roughly equivalent to 25 human years, after which each year equates to 4 human years.
In fact, the SBP equates to the only insurance-type product in the country that you pay into but legally can be prohibited from collecting.
While investigators might not like it, and even deem it suspicious, no jury will ever be permitted to infer that his silence equates with guilt.
"[I]n a culture that equates masculinity with physical power, some men and boys will invariably feel like they are failing at 'being a man,'" Prof.
None of this equates Obama's immigration policy (which had plenty of positive elements along with those that were criticized) with that of Trump's heinous, inhumane approach.
This accounts for less than a tenth of Fitch's global sovereign portfolio by number of companies and equates to two-fifths of global government debt outstanding.
"The 'report' equates allegations with fact, flatly ignores a number of improvements made by CBP as well as oversight conducted by outside, independent agencies," Hetlage said.
Psychologists distinguish between "fluid intelligence", which is the ability to solve new problems, and "crystallised intelligence", which roughly equates to an individual's stock of accumulated knowledge.
On the practical side, this collection probably equates to three rooms full of things I'll no longer have to care for, document, clean, tune, and insure.
Chief Executive Maksim Timchenko said imports cost around 2,500 hryvnia ($13) per tonne, while the tariff paid by the state regulator equates to 1,800 per tonne.
In the last four decades, the film has sold an estimated 178.1 million tickets, which equates to around $1.6 billion at the modern domestic box office.
This equates to one for every 727,256 Germans, not a world away from America's tally of one for every 250,249 (though it has 243 in total).
Today it's trading near 2200, which equates to a 226 percent increase in the large-cap stock index over the last seven-and-a-half years.
If we spend 40 hours a week, 48 weeks a year, over 40 years, that equates to almost nine full years in the office or factory.
It's easier to make fun of a bottom than a top, because the bottom is taking on a "woman's" role and society equates femininity with weakness.
U.S. government bond investors saw a loss of about half their capital in the 20 years from 1900, which roughly equates to where we are now.
I'm not here to suggest that a white person using dark emoji equates to all-out racism, nor am I here to police your emoji usage.
Other important tidbits become general rules: The level of armor that you have equates roughly to the number of additional hits you can take from guns.
About an order of magnitude better performance per watt than the alternatives (Nvidia GPUs, presumably), which Google equates to leaping forward three generations of Moore's Law.
"Carter's behavior was horrible, morally reprehensible, but I'm not sure that equates with legal responsibility," said Daniel Medwed, professor of law at Northeastern University in Boston.
Sources of longer-term FC funding are limited for Nigerian banks and we estimate that FC funding equates to less than half of FC sector loans.
The price women pay to have children during their careers equates to a salary gap of about £300,000 ($773,000) with that of men's, new data shows.
AUB's board proposed for 2015 a cash dividend of $0.045 and a 5 percent stock dividend, which equates to 5 free shares for every 100 held.
In 2013 alone a quarter billion prescriptions were written, which equates to "enough for every American to have their own bottle of pills," the agency reported.
For a referendum to pass, 25% of the nation's eligible voters must vote "Yes," which equates to about 4.7 million votes, while also outnumbering "No" voters.
Add to this a worldview that equates rationality with dispassion and it makes scientists leery of dramatic claims, even when the evidence points in their direction.
And I think that's one of the things that I've realized as I've matured, and become more clear in my head of what that equates to.
Now that the solar farm has been completed it's projected to create 1.3 megawatts of electricity each year, which equates to over 3,600 tons of coal.
That equates to roughly 10 women a day in Mexico, which doesn't begin to account for the thousands more who have gone missing in recent years.
So 10 rolls left at three visits per day (the default for the website when you visit it for the first time) equates to 53 days.
So 10 rolls left at three visits per day (the default for the website when you visit it for the first time) equates to 53 days.
Republican leaders have made clear they don't see a need for more witness testimony, which Democrats have said equates to a "cover up" of Trump's actions.
First, she equates faith with individual spiritual growth, but faith, as it is understood in most religious traditions, involves a perceived relationship with a divine being.
The district's total population of around 46,0003 increased by 1% in FY16 and its GDP of around NZD2.3 billion equates to 1% of the national GDP.
But in a politics oriented around zero-sum questions of national identity, and with razor's edge control of Congress constantly at stake, compromise equates to surrender.
The [total energy] of those collisions is no more than the mass of like, a mosquito or something (CERN equates it to a bumblebee hitting your face).
The economically smaller Gulf states face greater risk of currency devaluation and run substantial current account deficits — Oman's equates to more than 15 percent of its GDP.
That equates to about half of Shell's 2017 oil production and would make the reservoir one of the biggest discoveries of the past decade in the industry.
A 1950s ENGINEERING FEAT Michigan's debate over whether Line 5's age equates to a safety hazard could resonate across a nation crisscrossed with decades-old pipelines.
Denny's equates being falsely accused of not staying open 24 hours to "character assassination," which honestly may be just as ridiculous as Taylor's use of the term.
This is important to note because on the lenses of Smart Glasses, a true black projected tone equates with the absence of color and therefore total transparency.
For far too many families, this equates to $0 (or worse) because of the lack of well-paying jobs — while expenses continue to rise across the board.
Based on the NBC campaign spending figures from December, that equates to $94 for every minute of Trump coverage, versus $714,000 for every minute of Bush coverage.
Instead, Elena was put into what equates to a vegetative state, which leaves the door open for her to return and to her soulmate, Damon (Ian Somerhalder).
Consumption fell by 53 million tonnes of oil equivalent (mtoe), which equates to about 79.5 million tonnes of hard coal on an energy basis, the review said.
Studies have shown that increased presence of police in an area often equates a greater risk of abuse at the hands of police, especially for sex workers.
An adult will only weigh up to around 150 grams (about 1/3 lb.) and so each baby equates to around 10 percent of its body weight.
And because the president increasingly equates women to sexual objects, he's grossed out to learn their bodies have purposes outside the realm of heteronormative sex (with him).
That equates to about 3 million tonnes of coal, almost 60 percent of China's average daily needs for its coal-fired power sector, according to Reuters calculations.
That equates to 700,000 barrels per day, 8 percent of China's daily imports and a large volume for the United States, a newcomer to the Chinese market.
The directors of IOF manager Investa Listed Funds Management said they unanimously recommend the offer, which equates to a distribution adjusted price of A$5.15 per unit.
On PredictIt, Clinton traded early Wednesday at a price of 59 cents a share, which equates to the probability participants give her to be the ultimate winner.
That means men should be reducing their intake to 14 units of alcohol each week, which equates to about six pints, the same level as for women.
For some, efficiency equates to time-saving, for others, it may be cost savings—such as spending more time to commute further for a less expensive product.
NN Group's offer equates to a 55 percent premium to Delta Lloyd's average share price in the three months prior to NN's initial bid on Oct. 5.
According to the filing, Dorsey now owns about 16 million Twitter shares, which equates to a stake of about 2.2 percent in the company he co-founded.
Some $1 billion of debt equates to around 5-6 times Landis+Gyr's approximate $200 million in earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization, the sources said.
In the three months after their episode aired, the duo racked up $1.4 million in sales, which equates to about 150,000 bags of their gourmet beef jerky.
For context, a simple demonstration would be an investor who's willing to lose 10% to gain 30%, which equates to a return-to-risk ratio of three.
"  In the nuclear world that equates to "multiple independent and redundant layers of defense" so that "no single layer, no matter how robust, is exclusively relied upon.
The firm's scale equates the danger of a Trump presidency to the threat of Islamic terrorism, potentially reducing global economic growth by as much as 1.5 percent.
That's an average of 1.4 million tons of captured carbon a year, which equates to $49 million in annual tax credits it can claim for 12 years.
While it's not strongly enforced, breaking the law is technically punishable with a month-long jail sentence and a 1000 taka fine, which equates to $10 USD.
In 2010, prior to this ACA provision, a third of Americans between the ages of 19 to 29 were uninsured, which roughly equates to 13 million people.
The company also reported a net loss of $85033 million, which equates to a 36 cents per share loss, exceeding investor expectations of 32 cents per share.
The Sierra Club's 28503 GW target equates to roughly 22019 million tons of lost coal production — the annual volume of coal required to supply these power plants.
The government said the E10 blend could potentially reduce CO2 emissions from transport by 750,000 tons annually, which equates to removing approximately 20353,000 cars off the road.
Under the guise of fairness to workers as a whole, this approach equates national interest with the profit-seeking behavior of United States corporations or protectionist groups.
They argue that guns will contribute to a climate of fear in schools and note that study after study equates more guns with more injuries and deaths.
That equates to a minimum of $8,000 for a first-round appearance in the qualifying rounds or $50,000 for a first-round appearance in the main draw.
The governing party promotes a brand of nationalism that requires a carefully curated version of Polish history and equates criticism of Poland with a lack of patriotism.
However, he, like many other evangelicals, often equates "evangelicals" with "Christians," and negates the role Northern white Catholics and mainline Protestants played in the civil rights movement.
Patrick Kinsel, chief executive of Notarize, equates the video notarization to telemedicine, and he said the process provided a verifiable record if the will was ever contested.
One estimate from the US Department of Commerce puts the annual number deposited in landfills at 3.5 billion, which equates to nearly 200 million pounds of steel.
And he said he does not support reducing funding, but does want to curtail its growth -- which many Democrats and consumer advocates say equates to a cut.
That equates to a carbon footprint larger than several of its member states, including Malta and Liberia, according to statistics from the Global Carbon Atlas for 2017.
That equates to a carbon footprint larger than several of its member states, including Malta and Liberia, according to statistics from the Global Carbon Atlas for 2017.
This equates to about $69.87 a barrel, meaning there is only a tiny premium of 54 cents a barrel currently between the INE and DME equivalent contracts.
Facebook and Google made up a combined 60 percent of the digital ad industry in the US last year, which equates to roughly $65 billion in revenue.
WARC estimates that around 22018 billion people currently access the internet via only their smartphone, which equates to 20183 percent of the global base of 22018 mobile users.
The value of the seized goods - which equates to around 500 elephants and up to 13,000 pangolins - was over HK$62 million, ($7.90 million) officials said on Friday.
That equates to roughly 1.5 terabytes of footage that were condensed into this astounding ten-minute, 4K timelapse that will make you long for a life at sea.
The company claims that the motor can withstand over 300,000 openings and closings, which equates to roughly 150 times per day for over five and a half years.
The political internet has widely declared Kaine the "safe" choice, where safe equates to white, male, and lacking in particular appeal to the progressive wing of the party.
The solution to these equations is a set of prices that equates demand and supply for scarce commodities in every market, including the market for labour and capital.
The game promises "less math than traditional RPGs and more emphasis on storytelling and party game craziness," which equates to more camp-like activities and less monster fighting.
Trump equates white nationalists to counterprotesters, saying there was violence in Charlottesville coming from "both sides"; flash floods in Sierra Leone kill hundreds; Alabama's special election heats up.
The Lonely Island considers that very question in its new video for "Finest Girl (Bin Laden Song)," which equates a night of monumental sex with Osama bin Laden.
She says 100,000 followers tends to translate to rates of $1,000 to $5,000 dollars per post, while 1 million followers equates to rates starting at $10,000 and up.
That equates to an average delay of about two-and-a-half months, which can add up quickly for graduates with thousands or tens of thousands in loans.
That all equates to 12,000 DVD-quality movies or 400 million social media-level photos, which should just about satisfy the monthly output of your average Instagram user.
CA expects Veracode will add 33710003%-3371908% to revenue for fiscal 33710540, which Fitch estimates equates to roughly $337117 million of annual revenue, including the deferred revenue haircut.
But for someone like Kendall Jenner — and, really, for any of us who call the Northeast home — that cold weather staple usually equates to a bulky puffer jacket.
The stats: Facebook interns take 1st place as the highest-paid interns in the U.S. They make on average $8,000 per month, which equates to $96,000 per year.
"There persists an idea that acknowledgement of LGBTQ people equates to promoting a specific agenda or advocating for deviant behavior," he told the St. George newspaper last week.
"(That) equates to about four times the Mercedes Benz Stadium at capacity — every day," she said, referring to the venue where the NFL's championship game will be held.
Gallagher equates Thee Oh Sees' "The Static God" to a really bad trip where he's chased by the big lady from Tom and Jerry holding a frying pan.
In an industry obssessed with 'culture fit' that more often than not equates to 'bromance', the whiteboard claims to test not only your logic, but your work style.
"The problem with the policy is that it equates LGBT content with porn," Xiao said on Sunday, adding that she believes the government is not actively anti-LGBT.
NMSU's Hae-Na Chung and her team of researchers discovered you can fit in 240 live mosquitoes per cubic centimetre, which equates to 1,200 mosquitoes to a teaspoon.
Fun, furry fact ... aside from 9 lives, the first 2 cat years is roughly equivalent to 25 human years, after which each year equates to 4 cat years.
His comments echoed a frequent refrain of President Tayyip Erdogan, who often rails against the high cost of credit in Turkey, and equates high interest rates with treason.
When factoring in synergies, it says the offer equates to around 12.57 pounds to Comcast, implying a multiple of 15.3 times Sky's forecast 2020 earnings, and falling thereafter.
Specifically, the inclusion of meat contributed a 15% reduction and the slicing and pounding a 12% reduction, which Dr Lieberman calculates equates to 2.5m fewer chews a year.
The new regulations will cover companies with at least 250 workers - which equates to more than 15 million employees or almost half of Britain's workforce, the government said.
The company's net leverage target of 21000x, capitalizing leases at 2110x, equates to 21000x Fitch-defined leverage (capitalizing leases at 211x) assuming minimal cash balances for both calculations.
It has taken root so strongly that it now equates to groupthink: talk like a corporate robot or lose your standing as a top mind in the room.
This equates to $10.80 per week assuming a 6900-hour work week and $561.80 a year assuming a 40-hour work week and 52 paid weeks of work.
They can't destroy the U.S., only cause a lot of damage and trigger a swift and overwhelming response that equates to suicide for the regime and North Korea.
Ithaca, listed in Toronto and London, said on Monday its board had recommended the Israeli conglomerate's cash offer of C$231.25 per share, which equates to 225 pounds.
The value of the seized goods - which equates to around 500 elephants and up to 13,000 pangolins - was over HK$62 million, ($7.90 million) officials said on Friday.
And experts suggest it does not seem likely that the regulation, as drafted, equates to a right for people to be given detailed explanations of how algorithms work.
Based on analysts' area and production estimates, the average implied guess for soybean yield in Brazil is 29 tonnes per hectare, which equates to 22 bushels per acre.
But by characterizing both sides as biased, this article equates the real threat of racialized violence with the discomfort of being called a racist and asked to stop.
We've learned to see our role as journalists as important, but also as just the most visible component of a vast social machinery that equates expertise with maleness.
The American Heart Association's recommended added sugar limit is six teaspoons for women and nine teaspoons for men, which equates to a slim 150 to 100 calories respectively.
Underneath the dominant narrative that equates religion with socially conservative causes, religious institutions have quietly been in productive — if contentious and sometimes violent — dialogue with queerness for decades.
Based on the current US labor force, Mnuchin's projected unemployment rate equates more than 32 million Americans would be out of a job, according to the CNN report.
The pricing of its shares equates to a market capitalization of 896 million euros, or about $1 billion, when Rovio begins initial trading on Nasdaq Helsinki on Friday.
Finally, they must complete 441 hours of community service, which equates to one hour of service for each Montanan killed in combat going back to the Korean War.
On a $400 loan, the fee would be $48, which equates to an annual interest rate of about 71 percent, according to an example on the bank's website.
In a 100-year flood plain, that equates to a 26 percent chance of flooding over a 30-year mortgage, the city's Office of Recovery and Resiliency noted.
The 13.8 GWh of electricity exported in 2019 equates to the average yearly electricity consumption of roughly 3,800 "typical" homes in the U.K., according to Simec Atlantis Energy.
Her lavish lifestyle and business acumen resonate with many young professionals who are hungry for fame and fortune in a society that often equates material wealth with success.
But when Zuckerberg takes the example of Infowars publishing misinformation and equates it with saying "something wrong on the Internet," that gets to the core of the problem.
It gets more challenging in January, when the full House votes and she'll need 218 votes or whatever equates to a majority of the House at the time.
If we estimate that average usage equates to roughly one hour each day, then a single player might generate 13.7 kilograms worth of carbon emissions throughout the year.
That equates to about an extra 6.73 million tonnes from Russia so far this year, while imports from North Korea have dropped by just over 26.7 million tonnes.
With bitcoin trading at around $7,500, the 1,800 bitcoin that can be produced on any given day equates to an annual market of around $5 billion a year.
With bitcoin trading at around $7,500, the 1,800 bitcoin that can be produced on any given day equates to an annual market of around $5 billion a year.
"Some argue that enactment of (this bill) equates to the government authorizing taking life, or 'playing God' with the lives of our citizens," Mills said, according to her office.
At the time, consumers had learned through Uber and Lyft and others that you can just grab your cell phone and press a button, and that equates to transportation.
This drop in productivity equates to an annual loss of $78 billion a year in South East Asia, and nearly $10 billion in West Africa, the consultancy's report said.
The financing equates to around 6.4 times the unit's approximate €1bn Ebitda and is set to comprise €6.5bn-equivalent of funded debt and around €700m-€800m of undrawn facilities.
German firms certainly should not revert to a system in which age equates to rank, reckons Gerhard Rübling, labour director of TRUMPF, a midsized engineering outfit; meritocracy must prevail.
"People think that equates to - eventually - big Chinese purchases in the world that ultimately filter back to the United States," said Don Roose, president of Iowa-based U.S. Commodities.
This dominant memory of Soviet rule also has produced a highly problematic concept of "double genocide" that equates the crimes of the Holocaust with those of the Soviet occupation.
Ultimately, Greenhouse equates strong unions, or at least worker power, with democracy itself, and he sees very few limits on what a successful and healthy labor movement could achieve.
It is not just bond investors that feel uneasy about a change in the political climate away from the status quo that often equates with stability for financial markets.
To hear that he equates the word and feeling of "love" with pain pulled at my heartstrings — but it was also something that I could relate to so well.
Other companies, like Sphero spin-off Misty Robotics, are hoping to bring more advanced functionality to the market, though they've given themselves what equates to a 10-year runway.
For borrowers with $2275,000 in student loans (the average amount of debt graduates of public four-year schools have) that equates to about a 5.6 year delay in homeownership.
The rate equates to about 14 murders per 100,000 people, higher than the U.S. rate of about five per 100,000 people, but below that of Mexico's Central American neighbors.
This equates to an annual growth rate hit of about 0.6 percentage points, a bit more than a quarter of most economists' estimate of the sustainable GDP growth rate.
The directors of IOF manager Investa Listed Funds Management said they plan to unanimously recommend the offer, which equates to a distribution adjusted price of A$5.15 per unit.
But in that chamber, a one-percent victory (when all the votes from the 435 House races are added up) equates to a 85033-seat majority for the GOP.
This equates to approximately a third of the yearly electricity needs of Viva Energy's Geelong Refinery, which was constructed in 1954 and can refine 120,000 barrels of oil daily.
Her new, ongoing project, Nothing but Light, was created with this in mind: In a culture that equates women's nudity with liberation, her subjects' nakedness instead makes them vulnerable.
"In the last few years, over 25 million pounds of uranium supply have come off the market — and that equates to about 20% of global mined supply," he said.
On top of this, the cash cow's median payout yield — which equates to dividends plus buybacks/share price — is trending almost 1 full percentage point higher than global stocks.
That might sound incredibly paltry, but it's actually more than twice the minimum daily wage for workers in Sri Lanka, which equates to $2.68 a day, according to WWD.
As I loaded Shane's camera someone in his chat tipped him 25 tokens (that equates to a whopping $1.25), which bought them a prize from a virtual prize board.
According to Fast Company, the recycling rate for bottled water in America is only 23 percent, which equates to 38 billion water bottles that are just trashed every year.
All across America, we've seen the rise of a white evangelical Christian nationalism that equates Christianity with a particular notion of whiteness, as well as with GOP party politics.
In a monologue delivered poolside at a fancy resort, the impeccably manicured and accoutered Brooke equates being the victim of racism with her own experience as an "ugly" girl.
"While it's useful to have these figures available to us, nothing will change before we fix the ingrained perception in society that equates femininity with domesticity," Ms. Holt added.
"Part of the issue with the legs was also that I'm a 37," Calderón said, meaning the European shoe size that equates to a 6.5 in the United States.
Moreover, Vaciago explained that Italian law effectively equates spyware with physical surveillance devices, such as old school hidden microphones and cameras, limiting its uses to capturing audio and video.
In her piece, Jung equates pump companies with "big business" — but almost any industry whose primary driver is that humans need to eat is going to make big money.
When this electric griddle first launched, it was $250 but prices hover around $150 or even lower on sale, which equates to three of the aforementioned cheap panini presses.
But these companies are handling billions of premium dollars, so any increase in medical claims equates to hundreds of millions of dollars in additional spending, which they don't want.
That equates to a carbon footprint larger than several of its member states, including Malta and Liberia, according to statistics from the Global Carbon Atlas for the same period.
By telling his people that Communist China has never taken a wrong turn, he is stoking an impatient, hair-trigger nationalism in which criticism from abroad equates to hostility.
One of the protesters holds a placard that equates the Jewish financier George Soros and the Rothschilds with the European Union, saying they run Britain's "fake news" television channels.
For the most part, the stock went nowhere after today's earnings report, which more or less equates to a continuing run that's sent its shares skyrocketing in the past year.
In 2016, more than 1,600 American children were killed with guns, and at least 6,000 were shot and injured — this equates to an average of 23 children shot every day.
There is a big movement to repeal the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution, which equates the right to life of a pregnant woman with that of an embryo or foetus.
Eight out of 14 of Asia-Pacific's biggest countries now have consumer debt that equates to more than three-quarters of their annual economic output (GDP), data from HSBC shows.
The top 245% of Indian adults, a rich enclave of 2300m inhabitants making at least $103,210 a year, equates to roughly Hong Kong in terms of population and average income.
Human Rights Campaign suspended Google from this year's Corporate Equality Index after the company failed to pull a controversial app that the LGBT rights group says equates to conversion therapy.
The company says that by default, Netflix lets users stream around three hours of TV shows and movies per gigabyte of data, which equates to about 600 Kilobits per second.
MUMBAI (Reuters) - The Reserve Bank of India's change in monetary policy stance effectively equates to an additional 25-basis-point (bps) rate cut, Governor Shaktikanta Das was reported as saying.
The tracks that make up Purpose were streamed 205 million times in their first week of availability, a rate that equates to just over 290 million streams over 10 days.
But it could also be a result of an implicit bias that equates compensation with competence since most primary care fields are at the bottom of the pay scale ladder.
Ad of the Week A new digital ad campaign from Priorities USA, a "super PAC" supporting Hillary Clinton, equates fighting bigotry with stopping the presidential candidacy of Donald J. Trump.
The agency estimated less than 15 percent of the current oil production in the Gulf of Mexico has been shut-in, which equates to 254,607 barrels of oil per day.
Lawmaker Mo explained that the Chinese central government has a "profound" distrust of any push for broader democracy in Hong Kong because it equates those movements with demands for independence.
Players receive a "grade" that equates to a draft range, such as "third-fourth round," for a player considered to be ranked between 5 and 120 among all eligible prospects.
For a prime example, look no further than "Into the Blue" halfway through the album, a dance-ready slapper that equates trying to leave the one you love to drowning.
That equates to about $383 million in tuition money for the school year, a sum that isn't so hefty when you consider how much the school makes from its endowment.
Translated to English, Equivalenze, equates to "equivalences," a commentary perhaps on the cooperative reality of Penone's shifting artworks, one part man-made and one part a product of the Earth.
Dan Routh, a CFP with Old Peak Finance, equates true wealth to time freedom — having the financial ability to delegate activities in your life that you don't value or enjoy.
"This amount of fentanyl our CBP officers prevented from entering our country equates to an unmeasurable, dangerous amount of an opioid that could have harmed so many families," Humphries said.
The Defense Department boost equates to $165 billion more for the Pentagon over the next two years: $80 billion for fiscal year 2018 and $85 billion in fiscal year 2019.
VCE reports: The total savings between 213 and 2040 for transportation are estimated to be $15.6 billion (real 2017$), which equates to a saving of almost $21 million per year.
The proposed loss equates to 28503 million women without access to contraceptives, almost 22019,000 additional people infected with HIV and 31,300 new mothers, newborns or children who would die unnecessarily.
That equates to four rate increases in 28503 and at least one more in early 22019 near the time when Janet Yellen's term as head of the central bank expires.
This claim that equates eating eggs with one of the most dangerous health behaviors known to humankind is absurd and reflects an out-of-date understanding of cholesterol's role in health.
Bushveld says it has 434 million tonnes of vanadium and the possibility of growing that to 500 million tonnes in the near term, which equates to more than a century's supply.
Clay, the drama's living protagonist, is desperate to get "justice" for Hannah, which, for the teen boy, equates to seeing her rapist Bryce, who attacked both Hannah and Jessica, behind bars.
"As expected the total stimulus, (as flagged by Abe) equates to 28.1 trillion Japanese yen," Jeremy Stretch, head of G-10 FX strategy at CIBC Capital Markets told CNBC via email.
However, Kostin pointed out that the sudden spike in the 22009-year — 33 basis points over the past month — equates to two standard deviations and is typically associated with negative returns.
Still, 14 percent across countries like the US, UK, Canada, and Japan equates to around 66 million jobs lost, and food service is prime among the categories of highly automatable positions.
Their agreement comes at a cost: the $4.65 billion settlement equates to a write down of just 25%, far more generous terms than were offered to creditors in 2005 and 2010.
Here's the goal of Doyle's work on animal communication: It would be nice to build a scale that equates the complexity of an animal's communication with the size of its brain.
The size of the CCI's fine was calculated based on Google's revenue from its operations in India only, and equates to around 5 per cent of its turnover in the market.
Therefore, in three years, Uber should have contributed 94,000 metric tons of CO2 into the atmosphere in New York City alone, which equates to nearly 20143 million pounds of coal burned.
I'm not sure how all that equates to the smell of a new Mac, but enough people have been hyped about this candle for it to sell out on the website.
Washington (CNN)To become speaker of the US House of Representatives, a candidate traditionally needs 2215 votes on the chamber floor because that equates a majority of the 21856-member chamber.
At a certain threshold — which equates to about 17 media articles per year and a dedicated analyst following of a little over six — executives become less likely to exaggerate their numbers.
This crucial point should resonate loudly and instructively with all who would still heap gratuitous praise upon a White House that bombastically equates personal success with the elicited envy of others.
" Sally Hunt from the University and College Union told The Guardian that Rudd's proposal "equates to pulling up the drawbridge and sending a message that the UK is closed for business.
Andreas Kriegenburg's "Ring," which dates to 2012, barely fleshes out its concepts, though it gently equates Wotan and Alberich, and blames both for their capitalistic exploitation of the environment and women.
This equates to an extra 23,2600 days in the hospital, $31 million in inpatient and post-acute care costs, and $2.5 billion in value of life every year, the study found.
The 800 million euro ($891.92 million) debt financing equates to around 6.5 times Constantia Labels' expected 113 million euro core profit for this year, including undrawn debt, the banking sources said.
"Culturally, Aboriginal people have an obligation to look after the country, whether that equates to managing it or making decisions about it," said the council's CEO, Nolan Hunter, in a phone interview.
Take those numbers and then factor in that residents are enduring 80-hour work weeks at a hospital, which equates to functioning more than 11 hours per day, seven days per week.
The country is home to hundreds of thousands of restaveks, children who become at a young age entangled in an arrangement that human rights groups say equates to modern-day domestic slavery.
The problem is that terrorists – those whose perverted view equates God's greatness with acts of bloodshed – know how clueless we are, and exploit our assumption that nothing bad can happen to us.
In May, the trading venue notified its users that it was hit with a major breach that saw hackers run off with around 7,000 bitcoins, which today equates to over $70 million.
One tap means you're rushed, two equates to skipping breakfast, and three normally resolves us to a baseball cap or ponytail and whatever makeup look we can throw together on the train.
According to a blog post, DeepMind was able to help reduce the amount of energy used for cooling by up to 40 percent, which equates to around an overall 15 percent reduction.
A US defense official told CNN that nearly two dozen Syrian aircraft were destroyed in the missile attack, which Pentagon officials say equates to about 20% of the regime's operating air force.
"Everybody equates Nicole with being a domestic violence victim, which she was, beyond belief," says Tanya, who with her sister, Denise, have spent more than two decades speaking out about domestic violence.
One full charge will get you through a claimed 260 hours of NC playback, which in my experience equates to longer than I'll ever go without recharging them just to be safe.
The total amount of electricity that could be produced by the parks equates to the power generated by one large nuclear power station, or two big coal- or gas-fired power plants.
When maxed out, the 6% back equates to $53 cash back, which is enough for most people to book at least a couple of hotel nights or a round-trip transcontinental flight.
Powles: The strategic implications of growing Chinese influence in the Pacific are threefold: First, that growing Chinese influence equates to the diminishing influence of the US, Australia, New Zealand, and other partners.
Based on current exchange rates the offer equates to about C$21.47 per Milestone Apartments unit, which is a premium of 9.2 percent to the unit's close of C$19.66 on Wednesday.
Of course, health experts have long cautioned against binge drinking, which roughly equates to consuming five or more drinks for men and four or more drinks for women in about two hours.
That equates to around 41 percent of the market, which is a larger share than the 36 percent seen below zero last April when German 10-year yields hit a record low.
That equates to only around five days' worth of sales at the levels of pre-2012, when European buyers were purchasing as much as 800,000 barrels per day (bpd) from the country.
Kids went through an obstacle course, beginning by crossing a moat and ending with something called the "Temple Run," which equates to racing against time to rescue an artifact from the temple.
This equates to improvement of 17.6 percent on previous year's figure * Group anticipates modest organic growth in 2016, higher than in the previous year, and expects to outperform the market research sector.
Continuous learning equates to personal growth that will teach your mind the focus it needs to be able to function well despite the numerous tasks you have on your to-do list.
That equates to an annualized return on equity of just 7.7 percent, weaker than the 8.9 percent showing, after stripping out accounting gains, that the firm managed in a dismal first quarter.
Killings in Canada: A national inquiry into the widespread killings and disappearances of Indigenous women and girls equates the violence with genocide, according to a long-anticipated report to be released today.
Pro-choice groups in Ireland have long argued that the 8th Amendment to the Constitution – which equates the life of the unborn with the life of the mother – needs to be repealed.
One interesting detail that he took from the original libretto but expanded was the way the innocent, rustic Simplicius equates the terror of the soldiers with a wolf that kills his sheep.
This figure equates to about one gun for every three people -- a rate that is considered high when compared with Australia, which has 22017 million guns, approximately one for every eight people.
After all, this is a president who equates white-supremacist, neo-Nazi, racist, xenophobic, violent protesters with those who come out in support of civil rights, social justice and equality for all.
Pacala equates the challenges confronting Climeworks and Carbon Engineering to what the wind- and solar-power industries faced in the 1970s and '80s, when their products were expensive compared with fossil fuels.
This all follows a rising pattern in the American system that considers corporations to be people, equates money to free speech, and understands justice to be reserved for those who can afford it.
Owners BHE Solar say that it has more than eight million solar modules and displaces roughly 407,000 metric tons of CO2 every year, which equates to taking 77,000 cars off the road annually.
This equates to almost one accident per minute and one death every four minutes on roads -- making it a bigger killer than HIV/AIDS and other diseases, according to the World Health Organization.
Hendry predicts it will rise further, and estimates that every 100 basis points of widening equates to around 10 percent increase in the probability investors are attaching to a euro zone break-up.
Then on the Michael side of the equation, Jane has been struggling with her widow-related guilt for starting a relationship with Raf since early March, which equates to months in Jane time.
At those discounted levels the banks were set to sacrifice most, if not all, of their 1.75% fee offered on the deal, which on a collective basis equates to around €25m of fees.
Non-compliance equates to massive fines: For the most serious infringements — which include exploiting user data without the proper consent — it's up to 4 percent of a company's annual income, or €20 million.
Pro-choice Repeal the Eighth campaigners are calling for a referendum on this part of the country's constitution, which equates "the right to life of the unborn" with the mother's right to life.
Much as the new president hates Mexico's democratising "neoliberal" governments since the 1980s, which he (questionably) equates with the pre-revolutionary dictatorship of Porfirio Díaz, his nationalism has a strong streak of pragmatism.
According to research by networking site LinkedIn and LGBT+ organization UK Black Pride, gay, bisexual and transgender employees earn 16% less on average than their heterosexual peers, which equates to £6,703 a year.
We knew about big storms on Saturn before this one was observed — known as Great White Spots, they tend to pop up once a Saturnian year, which equates to about 30 Earth years.
That equates to four mugs of instant coffee (at 100mg per mug), around three cups of filter coffee (at 140mg per cup) or just over five cups of tea (at 75mg per mug).
Later in the episode, the show cuts to Logan and William, hanging out in a bar doing some business-minded glad-handing — which in Logan's case equates with trying to pick somebody up.
The upgrade was based on the following expectations for the company in 2017: The price target of $28 "equates to a 4.4 percent dividend yield, equivalent to Lyondellbasell, " Roberts said in the note.
"This equates to adding an extra $4.9 trillion per year to the global economy by 2030 (in today's prices) — equivalent to an economy greater than the projected size of Germany's," the report said.
A national project America's right could support might ease the rigidity of a movement some of which borders on anarchism in its hostility to government and much of which equates compromise with treachery.
Five percent of the time — which equates to hundreds of thousands of rides every month — a passenger will then update the destination mid-ride to get the driver to make a second stop.
In contrast, Kristeva and Sollers's presentation of their marriage seemed the work of two people who think openness equates with exposure, and thus were more involved with self-protection than with truth-speaking.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch, HSBC, JP Morgan, Natwest and Societe Generale are offering a staple financing to potential buyers that equates to 6.25 times the division's approximate €1bn Ebitda, the sources said.
The bomb is estimated to have an explosive yield of 120 kilotons, which equates to a blast created from 265 million pounds worth of TNT, according to Norsar, a Norwegian geoscience research foundation.
"The Breakfast Club" host is fully on board with the #CancelLindaFairstein movement in the wake of Netflix's limited series on the CP5, "When They See Us" ... and Charlamagne essentially equates her to Satan.
Under current UK Government guidelines, 80 grams of fruit or veg is considered a portion, which equates roughly to a couple of satsumas, an apple, or three heaped tablespoons of carrots or peas.
Lyft anticipates in the first year of the pledge, it will offset more than a million metric tons of carbon — which the company equates to hundreds of thousands of cars off the road.
That equates to billions of dollars that used to go to partisan political activity, now being funneled through nonprofits that will be swamped by this flood of unlimited, anonymous and tax-deductible money.
"Trump thinks of himself as the only person who matters on foreign policy, he equates good personal relationships with foreign leaders as good foreign policy," Washington Post columnist Daniel Drezner wrote on Monday.
Though Wal-Mart's online sales growth has slowed in recent quarters, increasing roughly 203 percent in the second quarter, that still equates to nearly $2 billion in additional sales, according to Moody's estimates.
Over the course of the one-hour, 40-minute flight from London to Nice, the Cessna would have burned around 411 gallons of aviation fuel, which equates to 4.7 tonnes of CO2 produced.
In a separate study that has not been released, he and his colleagues looked at existing research in an effort to demonstrate that staying in school longer directly equates to higher IQ scores.
The sum equates to about $16.7 million in TV ads per week, while Clinton's campaign is on pace to spend $11 million per week, with the option to buy more at any time.
Collectively, the banks said rates being raised to 1 percent, or 100 basis points, over a 12-month timeframe equates to more than $9 billion in interest income, the revenue derived from lending.
In a world that equates "beautiful" with "thin," and "good" with "skinny," for any of us that fit outside of those unrealistic (and arbitrary) beauty ideals, loving our bodies can be super hard.
For example, in his classic work "Apologí a de la Hispanidad," Isidrio Gomá y Tomás, a Spanish cardinal and major partisan of the fascist movement, directly equates Hispanidad with Spanish Catholicism and colonialism.
Because Bohemian Rhapsody only equates queerness with sex, and because it frames his queer lifestyle as bad, Mercury's subsequent AIDS diagnosis is inherently set up and portrayed as a punishment for his queerness.
For some stars, "the level of precision equates to Earth-bound observers being able to spot a Euro coin lying on the surface of the Moon," the ESA says in a press release.
That equates to about 3.6 ICU beds per 10,803 people ages 16 and older — a number quite a bit higher than in most other countries, University of Pittsburgh professor Jeremy Kahn told Christopher.
While Americans value individual accomplishment and the freedom to be whatever you can become, blind self-interest when this administration is trampling all over traditional American values equates to fiddling while Rome burns.
An ordinance from the New York City public park system, which includes 30,000 acres in nearly 2,000 parks, equates the cutting, removing or defacing of trees, plants and flowers with destruction of property.
" It called for Trump and his entire administration to denounce it "in the strongest possible terms," adding ... "Anything less equates to a tacit endorsement of violence and should not be tolerated by anyone.
The 2300 million total daily users equates to a 2.9 percent quarter-over-quarter user growth rate, its lowest ever, and much slower than the 4.2 percent in Q2 and 5 percent in Q1.
Peter Nesbett, executive director of the Washington Project for the Arts, equates the new guidelines with the controversial 1989 attempt to censure artist recipients of NEA funding by conservatives who find their work immoral.
The following year, when Hillary Clinton announced her candidacy, she shared a post titled "Hillary Equates Gun Owners With Terrorists, Says They Are 'Prone to Violence,'" and later posted the NRA's anti-Clinton ad.
He equates self-driving cars to the switch between film and digital – at some point it just doesn't make sense to use film anymore, a prospect that both thrilled and upset this dedicated photographer.
The first victims of the financial crisis, argues Nahas, are the political elite, who he equates to "tribal chiefs" leading a hodgepodge of communities along religious sectarian lines that can no longer be sustained.
In practice I saw solid performance out of both models with the AC3900 maxing out at about 900Mbps internal network speeds which equates to some excellent Internet speeds when the entire system is working.
This equates to a drop in GDP by some 20173 percent, compared to limiting warming to around 2 degrees F. "That's just a pile of money we're throwing away by not mitigating," said Burke.
The choker-style necklace features South Sea barrel baroque pearls and retails for $198, which we imagine equates to way more clams than what Fred Flintstone had to shell out for Wilma's signature necklace.
That equates to a quarterly profit of $26 billion, Amazon's highest ever and a staggering 1,200 percent increase from this time a year ago, when the company posted a profit of only $197 million.
"I like seeing the size of the dick compared to my body and grabbing it, seeing how big it is in my hands," Bella says, while Theresa equates a larger size with more manliness.
Nevertheless, the government has also increased its inflation and nominal GDP projections, which means the 2018 deficit equates to 2.46 percent of GDP - slightly higher than the IMF-backed deficit target of 2.4 percent.
Capital One VentureOne offers 1.25 miles per dollar spent, for example, while Chase Sapphire Reserve gives you three points per dollar spent, which equates to around a 6.3% return if you do the math.
In a phone call with Movidius CEO Remi El-Ouazzane, he shared that the power consumption savings of the new chip equates to a 10-100x power savings over current models on the market.
The system allows eligible banks a 0% interest rate on part of the reserves they hold at the ECB, rather than applying the deposit charge that equates to the bank's base rate of -13%.
Friday, after a closed-door emergency meeting, the South Carolina Education Lottery Board of Commissioners moved to set aside $19.6 million, which they said "equates to the potential amount represented by" the winning tickets.
The system allows eligible banks a 0% interest rate on part of the reserves they hold at the ECB, rather than applying the deposit charge that equates to the bank's base rate of -13%.
If the dungeon equates the imprisoned to the monstrous, then pieces like howling dogs, Begscape and With Those We Love Alive ask us to inhabit the skin of the monstrous, the grotesque, the pitiable.
Last, we must fundamentally reconceive the focus, design and assessments in our school system, such that doing well equates to more holistic success factors that truly prepare students to thrive today and transform tomorrow.
"This book is about slavery, a false oppression narrative that equates having legitimately dangerous magical powers that kill people with being an oppressed minority, like a person of color," a reader wrote on Goodreads.
Drifting into an affair with a flighty teenager, Elena (Daisy Granados), Sergio equates her lack of education with Cuba's underdevelopment, taking her to museums that, in a particularly sardonic sequence, include Ernest Hemingway's villa.
If it's assumed that Hubei deaths won't more than double from their current level, the resulting 0.096 percent death/elderly ratio applied to 53 million Americans 65 and over equates to 52,000 U.S. deaths.
Even so, when a Facebook engineer even jokingly equates journalism with "being right on the internet," it suggests that respect for and understanding of journalism has not penetrated to all levels of the company.
That equates to an annualized return on equity of 12 percent, allowing the bank run by Jamie Dimon to perform the rare feat of besting its rival Wells Fargo, if only by a hair.
The tiering system allows eligible banks a 0% interest rate on part of the reserves they hold at the ECB, rather than the deposit charge that equates to the bank's depo rate of -0.5%.
That equates to some 236,115 barrels of oil per day, out of roughly 1.75 million barrels pumped daily from the Gulf, down from 323,760 barrels of oil per day that were shut on Wednesday.
The tiering system allows eligible banks a 0% interest rate on part of the reserves they hold at the ECB, rather than the deposit charge that equates to the bank's depo rate of -0.5%.
The bomb is estimated to have had an explosive yield of 120 kilotons, which equates to a blast created from 265 million pounds worth of TNT, according to Norsar, a Norwegian geoscience research foundation.
The new dividend equates to 30.7% of 2Q7503 diluted earnings per share and the total payout would be about 76% of annualized 2Q17, assuming the full deployment of repurchase authority over the next four quarters.
She used to love giving (and getting) luxury cars, and the s shift from an expensive material item to what, among hyper-rich people, likely equates to a handmade birthday card, is an interesting one.
Over the last 13 months Citi returned $12.2 billion of capital to shareholders via a mix of dividends and share repurchases, which equates to a payout ratio over the last 12 months of approximately 79%.
" Read the resolution here It also says pornography "equates violence toward women and children with sex and pain with pleasure, which increases the demand for sex trafficking, prostitution, child sexual abuse images, and child pornography.
According to data from IHS Markit, China added more than 216,234 screens in 2018, which equates to around 25 new screens per day, mostly in smaller conurbations known as tier two to tier five cities.
We've reached the end of week four in Paradise – which really only equates to about a little more than a week of actual filming – but somehow we've already got our first major breakup this season.
That level of caffeine also equates to drinking nine shots of espresso or more than eight cans of Red Bull (although you'll look like less of a d-bag with one cup of Black Insomnia).
This equates to roughly three times the company's sales, and while Blue Apron has no publicly listed peer, some analysts pointed out that was higher than home good company Wayfair Inc's 1.8 times sales multiple.
Was £21080, now £2779.00  Nord VPN, 43 years of online privacy for $24 / £21 (Equates to £2379.99 p/m, saving £235 over a period of 3 years) SanDisk Extreme 32GB microSDHC Memory Card + SD Adapter.
The total amount of electricity that could be produced by the parks approved on Friday equates to the power generated by one large nuclear power station, or two big coal- or gas-fired power plants.
In light of Trump telling people that "nobody has more respect for women than I do," it's fascinating that what reportedly irks him most about the sketch is McCarthy's gender, which he equates with weakness.
The organization is staunchly nonpartisan, but as Ivy's letter shows, treading that line in the Trump era is nearly impossible: the context being so toxic, that to members, "business as usual" equates to banal acquiescence.
MTN, which makes about 37 percent of its revenue from Nigeria, has filed a court challenge over the fine, which equates to more than twice its annual average capital spending over the past five years.
The Daily Beast report also says that Tesla's Fremont plant had "more than 10,000 factory employees making about 100,000 cars last year, " which equates to a production rate of just 10 vehicles per employee annually.
Nonetheless, strangers on social media and friends in my daily life mistakenly assume that my opposition to Trump equates to some sort of new sympathy for liberalism in general or for Hillary Clinton in particular.
A typical two-week payday loan with a $15 per $100 fee equates to an annual percentage rate of almost 400 percent, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which issued the directive last year.
The 10% increase in snowfall over the past two centuries equates to about 272 gigatons of water more being deposited as snow over Antarctica every year -- or about double the volume of the Dead Sea.
Once Yoshi saws off the head, he pulls out a pair of ice packs from inside the fish and the crowd's eyes pop in surprise, a moment that Way equates to a Christmas morning unwrapping.
For those outside the beauty community, it may be hard to reconcile how this talk of racism, ex-friends, and bitches doing better somehow equates to tens of thousands of dollars in lost business opportunities.
The false correlation that admitting you need to see a doctor equates to admitting defeat or failure serves to complicate the procedure further still; thus, in short, making the first move can be very difficult.
Raiffeisen Bank International has reached an agreement on the sale of its leasing company - Raiffeisen Leasing Polska SA - with PKO Leasing SA. The purchase price equates to about 200 million euros ($222 million), Raiffeisen said.
Rossello told Reuters he made that decision because the territory option - which Rossello equates to colonialism - already lost in a previous status referendum, in 2012, making this year's vote a choice between statehood and independence.
Banks are lining up debt financing packages to back the private equity bids and some £525m of debt equates to around 6.5 times Capita Asset Services' approximate £70m Ebitda, including undrawn debt, the sources said.
In another recent study, Fed economists estimated that trade policy uncertainty reduced the level of investment in the United States by at least 1 percent in 2018, which equates to several hundred billions of dollars.
Most states still require sex education to stress abstinence (a legit option, for sure, as long as it's one among many: not a mandate that equates sexually active teens with, say, chewed pieces of gum).
But while the industry often equates greenness with materials and manufacturing and also tends to attribute landfill problems to fast fashion of the cheap and disposable kind, it should think about high-end consumption, too.
Every 50 basis point adjustment in the Tier 1 target above 10 percent equates to nearly A$2.2 billion in additional capital, Morgan Stanley analyst Richard Wiles said in a CBA-focussed note on Monday.
Put simply, this reciprocity argument demeans our foreign policy and our military and intelligence services when it equates what we do to fight terrorism with what a few other countries do to support of terrorism.
With 28503 remaining detainees today, that equates to over $22019 million per detainee per year, not including approximately $200 million in costs for military construction and other improvements needed to upgrade a now crumbling facility.
The recently tested bomb is estimated to have an explosive yield of 120 kilotons, which equates to a blast created from 265 million pounds worth of TNT, according to Norsar, a Norwegian geoscience research foundation.
Gabrielle Zuckerman, 20, a Jewish student at U.N.C. and a member of Hillel, said she worried that the executive order "falsely equates anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism" and is targeted at eliminating criticism of Israel.
What a magical coincidence that 20 additional home games over two years equates to a 24 percent increase of home games, a nearly identical rate of increase to employment in Cleveland bars surrounding Quicken Loans!
It's not clear how many impressions that equates to (it's possible one person saw multiple ads), but Facebook says that 44 percent of the ads were displayed before the 2016 election, and 56 percent came after.
"This equates to a rate of roughly two injuries per every three games, making a fan injury from a foul ball a more common occurrence than a batter being hit by a pitch," the study said.
The term has evolved to encapsulate a political meaning, one that now equates mainstream conservatives with effeminate values, with the term cuckservative used to denote someone who willfully absorbs conservative values with a liberal/centrist bent.
These are the kinda questions posed in Corporate Warfare, a digital illustration series by the Foreal design studio that equates the power and impact of big brand corporations to that of a torpedo or atomic bomb.
Eonia money market futures dated to the ECB's December meeting price in 1.5 basis points worth of rate cuts, which analysts say equates to roughly a 15 percent chance of a 10 basis point rate cut.
"We are thrilled to be announcing 10 new hotel deals in just nine months, which equates to a new signing every month," said Andrew McLachlan, senior vice president for development in sub-Saharan Africa at Radisson.

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