45 adjectives to describe equivalent

Since writing as above, a friend informs me that arture is the exact equivalent of the [Greek: haphae] of Colossians ii. 19, as interpreted by Bishop Lightfoot'the relation between contiguous limbs, not the parts of the limbs themselves in the neighbourhood of contact,'for which relation 'there is no word in our language in common use.']

Monroe Calculating Machine Co., Inc. (PWH); 29Mar62; R293039. Table of shillings and pence expressed as the decimal equivalent of a pound sterling.

Its nearest native equivalent is, probably, our Dead-Beat;" meaning, variously, according to circumstances, a successful American politician; a wife's male relative; a watering-place correspondent of a newspaper, a New York detective policeman; any person who is uncommonly pleasant with people, while never asking them to take anything with him; a pious boarder; a French revolutionist.]

I know little, daughter, of the interests of life; but there are enemies of the Republic who say that its servitude is not easy, and that it seldom bestows favors of this sort without seeking an ample equivalent.

U.S. measures and their metric equivalents.

The hauteur of the noblesse acted as a fatal equivalent to every other crime; and many, who did not credit other imputations, rejoiced in the humiliation of their pride.

We are very glad to find someone to take it off our shoulders if we can; so glad that we are prepared to pay him for the service, to pay him a sum which covers not only the actuarial equivalent of the risk, but something substantial over and above.

He is not content to write: "The smallest actual good is better than the most magnificent promise of impossibilities:" but he gives the concrete equivalent: "An acre in Middlesex is worth a principality in Utopia.

From the fact that the servant owed this to his master, we naturally infer, that he must have been at some time, and in some way, the responsible owner of that amount, or of its substantial equivalent.

Jealous as he ever was of the national honor and interests of France, no person throughout the world has imputed blame to him for accepting a pecuniary equivalent for this cession.

It signifies a city, and is an etymological equivalent of Goth.

EXERCISE Give familiar equivalents for the following words: 1. emancipate.

And this is what I remember of it, rendered into English with a very feeble equivalent of the rhythm that seemed so resonant in those tropic nights

A half-governess is, we suppose, the feminine equivalent of two quartermasters.

But of course no extra energy can be gained by the use of steam in this way; all the energy must come from the coke, the steam being already a perfectly burned product; the use of steam is merely to serve as a vehicle for converting the carbon into a convenient gaseous equivalent.

For each quoted expression in the preceding paragraph compose a sentence which shall contain the correct form, or the grammatical equivalent, of the expression.

And it is a singular fact that the Mohammedan phrase Oxald, "Would to Allah," is still the most familiar ejaculation in the Portuguese language and the habitual equivalent in their religious books for "Would to God.

Psychologically described, the sound induced an imaginal complex equivalent to the earlier painful experience.

Which word the more definitely denotes money or its immediate equivalent?

What you call Socialism is his intellectual equivalent for Diabolo and Limerick competitions.

This, however, is not Vergil's last mention of Siro, if we may believe Servius, who thinks that "Silenum" in the sixth Eclogue stands for "Sironem," its metrical equivalent.

We may define foreign exchange as the purchase and sale of the right to receive a given kind and weight of metal or its monetary equivalent in current funds at a specified time and place.

Cupid's arrowthe naive Greek equivalent of the medieval love-philterwhy Pallas' body is not merely laid on the funeral pyre with the traditional wailing, why Turnus does not meet his foe with an Homeric boast.

Its nearest native equivalent is, probably, our Dead-Beat;" meaning, variously, according to circumstances, a successful American politician; a wife's male relative; a watering-place correspondent of a newspaper, a New York detective policeman; any person who is uncommonly pleasant with people, while never asking them to take anything with him; a pious boarder; a French revolutionist.]

For the benefit of the future traveller, I give, however, a few native expressions for distances, with their numerical equivalents: "cheimuk"near, twenty versts; "bolshe nyet"there is no more, fifteen versts; "sey chas priyédem"we will arrive this minute, means any time in the course of the day or night; and "dailóko"far, is a week's journey.

45 adjectives to describe  equivalent