It had begun as an experiment to prove the meaninglessness of best-seller lists, or indeed any standard that equates quantity with quality. |
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Therefore, the proportion of foul tackles equates to the likelihood of player error occurring during the execution of a tackle. |
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And then there's an opportunistic foreign policy that equates despots with democrats and which has baffled the most seasoned of diplomats. |
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His literate sense of the handgun equates to a read you will find yourself devouring as you would a fine steak at a world-class eatery. |
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It has also provided ammunition for those who believe that simplicity equates with truth. |
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The basic equivalence is that one year's heavy dust exposure equates to one year's average smoking. |
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If he is rational, he will choose a price that maximizes his profit, the price that equates marginal cost with marginal revenue. |
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Nike broadcasts a message that equates its famous swoosh with freedom, revolution and personal exuberance. |
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It will mean a rise in the police precept in council tax of seven per cent which equates to 10 pence a week per council taxpayer. |
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In the world where we live, the here and now, money equates to power, especially in the political arena. |
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However, the cost of delivering this mail now equates to 20 per cent of our delivery costs. |
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This compares to 6.4 million units a year earlier, which equates to just 6.5 percent market share. |
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This equates to a 6.12 per cent movement in the thresholds every three years. |
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This equates to nearly 40 per cent of all packaging placed on the Irish market. |
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This equates to more than 50 per cent more listeners than any comparable international broadcaster. |
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The efficient amount of news coverage equates the value of the marginal story with the value of alternative uses of these resources. |
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The sorry truth for all you druggies is that the myth that taking drugs equates to being a more interesting member of society has been exploded. |
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The author refuses to submit to a life of reason and science, which he equates with the incogitant passivity of a "piano-key." |
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Our failure to address this issue equates to abdicating our fundamental responsibility to the next generation of West Indian youth. |
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While we can say that 733 is a number that equates roughly to our total refugee quota today, it is not a large number. |
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This equates to more than 1,000 Police Officers unavailable for active duty. |
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This equates to about 9 months' growth and weight gain in an average child around this age. |
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Neither can I conclude that even a failure to adhere to good practice necessarily equates with maladministration. |
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Apparently, it therefore equates to humorous ridicule in the general sense, or good-honoured raillery. |
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It equates belief systems with what informs your approach to a situation, and evaluates the system by the results. |
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For the last four years I have cycled more then 20,000 km annually, which equates to too many hours sitting on a bicycle saddle. |
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A teenage werewolf tale that cleverly equates lycanthropy with menstruation, Snaps is a horror movie that apparently has something to say. |
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Since their flight suits are tailored when they join the team, maintaining their shape usually equates to eating light. |
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In antievolution literature, vertical change equates with macroevolution, or evolution above the species level. |
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Hiragana and katakana are both phonetic syllabaries, wherein each of the 46 symbols equates to one phonic. |
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They mistakenly believe control over their bodies equates to control over their lives. |
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If you're in the business of building software, user dissatisfaction quite simply equates to reduced sales. |
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Essentially, Waters equates nymphomania with zealotry, and in doing so reaffirms his historic place as the icon of trash cinema. |
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From this point forward, every incremental rise in the surf temperature equates to a couple more fish on the stringer. |
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This equates to surveying an area the size of Plymouth while being able to pick out isolated features the size of a dustbin. |
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What are the political consequences of an ideology that equates thinness with virtue and fat with vice? |
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But for Dexter, who equates intimacy with palpating someone's spleen, it's a genuine worry. |
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Earlier in the poem, anticipating reaction to this seeming detachment, he equates the indefinite article a with staring at an eclipse, eyes unshielded. |
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Mr. Harold Stead: I would like to say that the chill factor equates to deterrence in the minds of many people. |
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The Celtic Shorthair cat equates to an average European domestic cat, which has developed naturally, without any planned breeding aims. |
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The average North American still equates diesel power to an unrefined, noisy and underpowered driving experience. |
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A larger area of representation in the brain equates to greater sensitivity of the body part relative to others. |
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In a tradition that goes back to Durer's Melancholia but reached new power in the Romantic age, he equates genius and madness. |
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It's hard to reconcile how putting regional workers' jobs on the line equates to increasing the ABC's regional presence. |
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Any number less than 50 equates to almost double-digit declines in industrial production. |
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First, it equates someone of reduced mobility with a disabled person unable to walk and so requiring a wheelchair. |
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We believe that anyone who equates this with terrorism is violating fundamental rights. |
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Although there may be a perception that the yellow colour of the crop equates to a decline in quality, Horvey maintains this is not the case. |
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The cap means increased tuition levels, equates to fewer students each year. |
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More than one million businesses have been set up over the past 5 years, which equates to 550 new companies every day. |
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I can only presume that some member or members believed that consensus equates with a veto, a silent veto. |
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According to the report each grain of rice imported to Egypt equates to a precious drop of water saved. |
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In the case of a mechanically scanned antenna this equates to the revolution rate. |
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The cost of the boat equates to five trips each on a charter. |
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He equates them to the Sicilian Mafia, a criminal group within the population of Sicilians. |
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He equates reduced hours to reduced Church attendance and life that exists only on the Internet. |
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There are some who fear that lavish praise equates flattery. |
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It equates someone who decides to tell the world they're voting Meretz with someone who decides to tell the world they're gay. |
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Essentially it equates to the angle at which a screen can be views from before the image becomes unviewable. |
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An astronomical increase in spending does not equate to a vision for the country, but in fact equates with simple vote buying and electioneering. |
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The art of storytelling is ancient, but it is a flighty kind of world view that automatically equates oldness with staleness. |
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A premium of one times the employee's basic hourly rate of pay equates to double time. |
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That equates to an optimum return of 22.17 mpg on distance runs. |
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This tendency to assume that breadth of approach and application equates with an 'anything goes' looseness in M4P interventions is problematic. |
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Response: The notion that age equates to grade is out of tune with what we know about individual differences. |
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The increasing cost of raw land equates to more cost per unit for apartments. |
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Like all opportunists, Durgan equates tactical flexibility with unprincipled conciliationism. |
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For many countries, entrance into Europe equates to a process of renunciation. |
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This muddies the terminology and wrongly equates refugees and asylum seekers with criminals or other dishonest persons. |
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A different view equates representativeness with typicalness: Representativeness and uniqueness can be the extremes of a spectrum. |
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They are ugg chaussures sought for their superb design ensuring the wearers' wellbeing as well chaussure ugg as the high quality lambskin used that equates to durability. |
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Disaggregating property in single occupation would introduce valuation distortions, since the sum of the value of the parts of a property rarely equates to the value of the whole. |
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This equates to one in every four VAC clients being a CF member. |
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This tactic equates tobacco products with sexiness, glamour and sophistication, which resonates well with potential new consumers on the lookout for the next big trend. |
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Net Property Income from abroad equates to earnings arising from overseas investment and the ownership of other types of foreign financial assets. |
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In part, it seems that big now equates with importance and value. |
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He equates a condition called chronic fatigue syndrome with a propensity to malinger. |
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The rate of return of any investment project is simply the rate of interest that equates the discounted present value of expected benefits and the present value of the costs of the project. |
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May I conclude by asking Mr Quigley if he equates all those on welfare benefits as underclass scum? |
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This equates to around 10 reports of fly-tipping per 1,000 people in the city, below the national average of 16 reports per 1,000 people. |
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This equates to 200 times the average wage. |
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The severe criterion, which equates disability with unemployability, poses a further barrier for people living with episodic disabilities who may retain some capacity for work. |
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The first argument equates some forms of dualism with the heresy of Gnosticism. |
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The Economist Intelligence Unit picked Vancouver as its most livable city, with Vienna as No. 2. But the Economist clearly equates livability with speaking English. |
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For example, it is important to use the word toilet in referring to eco-san devices, since common usage equates latrine with a smelly outhouse at the back of the garden. |
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Each additional inspector will focus on 3,500 people – which, assuming a 35-hour working week, equates to 21.6 seconds per week per potential evader. |
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Apparently 10 per cent, which equates to about 280,000, are after a toyboy. |
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Beyond that, simply spending more time outdoors – versus in front of the TV screen or computer monitor – equates to an overall increase in physical activity. |
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In the last year the North East NHS has spent pounds 4,379,000, which equates to pounds 168 per quitter, on tackling the issue. |
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This equates to a tipping point when the value of a communications network to its users rises exponentially with the number of people connected to it. |
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This approach equates to viewing the problem through a microscope. |
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This opens a window which allows you to view the raw hexadecimal configuration data which equates to the configuration which is visible on the main screens. |
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The temptation of the hometowner is therefore the classic temptation of insularity, which equates interest with self-absorption. |
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What this all equates to is a broiler house water system that necessitates close to 20 gallons per minute. |
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This equates to leaving power in the hands of the oligarchy composed of the major companies that have entered into bilateral agreements with leading performers. |
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This equates to 1 cent per net tkm on average, assuming an average load factor of 16 tons rather than the maximum capacity of 25 tons of a typical 38 or 40 ton truck. |
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When viewed from this perspective, the marine mode once again becomes the transportation mode of choice, as burning less fuel equates to fewer emissions being vented into the air. |
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But not everyone equates silence with welcome quietude and refreshment. |
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The organists of York Minster have had several official titles, the job description roughly equates to that of Organist and Master of the Choristers. |
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This looser definition almost equates to that of the Nordic countries. |
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The system currency which is due to launch in 2017 will be on the gold standard, whereby one RMG token equates to 1 gram of physical gold held within in a Royal Mint vault. |
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The introduction of wine at the Mad Tea Party equates it with the ancient Greco-Roman Bacchanalia, a festival held in honour of the god of wine and madness. |
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Hollywood equates gunplay with foreplay in mega-budget mayhem. |
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Terrence Malick and Robert Redford produced this contemplative documentary that equates overdevelopment with cancer, and makes a pretty good case for the comparison. |
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Founder Bruce McFarland said Wednesday that having the mayor in the event's name equates to a City Hall endorsement of a specific religion, although no taxpayer money is used. |
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You can learn much about user routines, labels, displacements, equates and so on, by modifying this program and observing the results on the screen. |
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The first section of the program includes the system equates. |
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