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equivalent
[ih-kwiv-uh-luhnt, ee-kwuh-vey-luhnt]
adjective
equal in value, measure, force, effect, significance, etc..
His silence is equivalent to an admission of guilt.
corresponding in position, function, etc..
In some ways their prime minister is equivalent to our president.
Geometry., having the same extent, as a triangle and a square of equal area.
Mathematics., (of two sets) able to be placed in one-to-one correspondence.
Chemistry., having the same capacity to combine or react chemically.
noun
something that is equivalent.
equivalent
/ ɪˈkwɪvələnt /
adjective
equal or interchangeable in value, quantity, significance, etc
having the same or a similar effect or meaning
maths
having a particular property in common; equal
(of two equations or inequalities) having the same set of solutions
(of two sets) having the same cardinal number
maths logic (of two propositions) having an equivalence between them
noun
something that is equivalent
short for equivalent weight
equivalent
Equal, as in value, meaning, or force.
Of or relating to a relation between two elements that is reflexive, symmetric, and transitive.
Having a one-to-one correspondence, as between parts. Two triangles having the same area are equivalent, as are two congruent geometric figures.
Other Word Forms
- equivalently adverb
- nonequivalent adjective
- nonequivalently adverb
- quasi-equivalent adjective
- quasi-equivalently adverb
- superequivalent adjective
- unequivalent adjective
- unequivalently adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of equivalent1
Word History and Origins
Origin of equivalent1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Analysts think there are potential savings from such a move - which would be functionally equivalent to a new tax on banks - though they argue that £35bn a year figure is a considerable overstatement.
On Thursday, Firmus Energy announced its gas price in the Ten Towns area will fall by almost 8% in October, which is the equivalent to £78 a year for a typical customer.
Takahashi footed the bill to stage a cross-Pacific showdown between the two teams, hoping one day to own a Tokyo-based franchise — a cost of several hundred thousand dollars at the time, equivalent to millions today.
"I realised that they needed a way to dress that was equivalent to that of men," he said.
Those emissions would have a climate-warming impact roughly equivalent to 27 gas-fired power plants operating year-round, even if the flares burned every molecule of methane released from the wells.
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