0 to consider one thing to be the same as or equal to another thing:
He complained that there was a tendency to equate right-wing politics with self-interest.
2 to consider that one thing is the same as or similar to something else:
As is too common among cognitive scientists, they equate mental representations with representations of external physical objects.
The second objection against equating object-recognition abilities with (even simple) predication comes from the fact that the underlying cognitive processes are qualitatively different.
This is done using an energy principle based on equating the viscous flow dissipation with the released surface energy.
These statements illustrate just how basic the idea of organization is in such theories, being equated with the very nature of life itself.
I am not here equating these terms with moral particularism and moral universalism, whose differences turn on whether all ethics is situation-specific.
For a long time, linguistic anthropologists have argued against equating a population that shares a linguistic code with the status of an ethnic unit.
Individual equity under this system is generally equated with actuarial fairness, and most evaluations of social security are based on this idea.
Relative proportions of animal species are equated with the contribution that species made to the diet of the inhabitants.
中文繁体
同等看待, 使等同, 使相等…
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同等看待, 使等同, 使相等…
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equiparar, igualar…
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equiparar…
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bir tutmak, eşit saymak…
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concurrencer, assimiler, être égal à…
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klást rovnítko mezi…
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ligestille, sætte lighedstegn mellem…
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