Equal
in sentence
1850 examples of Equal in a sentence
And why, if we are
equal
in the eyes of God, are we not
equal
in the eyes of men?
You see, in the village, we were all
equal.
But in the eyes and the minds of the other kids, I was not their
equal.
And in their eyes, I was no longer their
equal.
Personal impact stories such as these show that we are tapping into something within men, but getting to a world where women and men are
equal
is not just a matter of bringing men to the cause.
So you had a legacy already built in terms of being an athlete, a legacy of the work you did to lobby for
equal
pay for women athletes and the Women's Sports Foundation.
And that moment, I promised myself I'd fight for
equal
rights and opportunities for boys and girls, men and women, the rest of my life.
It turns out, according to most studies, that those countries that are the most gender
equal
are also the countries that score highest on the happiness scale.
Even within Europe, those countries that are more gender
equal
also have the highest levels of happiness.
We know that inevitably it will be a climate-constrained world, because of the emissions we've already put up there, but it could be a world that is much more
equal
and much fairer, and much better for health, and better for jobs and better for energy security, than the world we have now, if we have switched sufficiently and early enough to renewable energy, and no one is left behind.
So I need to work with individuals who can support me as an
equal
and become my voice.
We should start making our own connections, fighting for this idea of an
equal
and globally interconnected world.
But what utterly shocked me was throughout all of this work I received
equal
measures of vitriol from the secular left, the same vehemence as the religious right.
Each one must be less than or
equal
to one.
But of all these unknowns, the biggest unknown is L, so perhaps the most useful version of the Drake equation is simply to say that N is approximately
equal
to L. The information in this equation is very clear.
Well, in 1811, someone had an idea that if you had
equal
volumes of gases, at the same temperature and pressure, they would contain an
equal
number of particles.
Well, the number of electors is
equal
to the total voting membership of the United States Congress.
"Now", Zeno might say, "since there are infinitely many of terms on the right side of the equation, and each individual term is finite, the sum should
equal
infinity, right?"
But the area of the square is just one unit, and so the infinite sum must
equal
one.
We as thought leaders and decision makers must push past the first steps of diversity and into the richer and more robust territory of full inclusion and
equal
opportunity.
That's because particles always have a counterpart, an antiparticle, and these are always produced in exactly
equal
amounts: 50/50.
Since antiparticles and particles should exist in
equal
numbers, this missing antimatter?
In the instant the universe was created, a huge amount of energy was transformed into mass, and our initial universe contained
equal
amounts of matter and antimatter.
Let n
equal
zero.
For instance, when we bake a fluffy sponge cake, even though the resulting delicious treat is much bigger in size than the cake batter that went into the oven, the weight of the cake batter should still
equal
the weight of the cake plus the moisture that has evaporated.
And Newton's Third Law states that for every action, there is an
equal
and opposite reaction.
But how can I take the area of a circle and create a square with an
equal
area?
For instance, the center of mass of a flat, rectangular object of uniform density will be in the intersection of both diagonals, in
equal
distance from each corner.
What was more pertinent, and continues to be so about ancient Athenian democracy, was the inclusion of the working poor, who not only acquired the right to free speech, but more importantly, crucially, they acquired the rights to political judgments that were afforded
equal
weight in the decision-making concerning matters of state.
Thus, slavery in Europe and the Americas acquired a racial basis, making it impossible for slaves and their future descendants to attain
equal
status in society.
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