Most students of hypnosis equate the phenomenon of amnesia with the somnambulistic state.
Many subjects equatethe inability to open the eyes with hypnosis.
It is a common and natural hypothesis to equate the low-watermark of culture early in the geometrical period with the generations immediately following the Dorian conquest of the Peloponnesos.
M252 The Twelve Nights are probably an ancient intercalary period introduced to equate twelve lunar months to the solar year.
The authorities equate the names Alberic and Avery.
The authorities are slovenly content to equate Mary with Maria, Muire, Marion, etc.
Other authorities equate it with the Sanscrit janaka, meaning father, whence it is maintained that the original meaning of the word was "father of a tribe".
Their bucklers are designed in the form of marguerites or marigolds; the A under the right hand figure is Alpha, whence we may perhaps equate this saint with Alpha, the consort of Noah.
We shall consider Robin Hood whom the authorities already equate with Odin in a subsequent chapter.
Of these fabulous Twain--the not altogether forgotten Two Kings of their ancestors--we may equate Uther with the uter or womb of Night and Aurelie Ambrosie with Aurora the Golden Sunburst.
The name of the aged Jew who furnished Alexander with this information is said to have been Papas, or Papias: Papas was an alternative name for the Phrygian Adonis, whence we may no doubt equate the old Adonis (i.
From a stone held in the hand of Perun's image the sacred fire used annually to be struck and endeavours have been made to equate this Western Jupiter with the Indian Varuna.
Equate immense simplicity with immense power and you might come up with a part of the answer.
You can't even equate the violence you encounter in everyday life with the violence that takes place in a big screen spectacle.
In order to graphically consider equations containing only one unknown, it is convenient to equate the terms to y; i.
This is the region in which we find the chief remains of the Villa-nova culture, which is not unlike that of the Dorians, so that it seems reasonable to equatethis culture with the Osco-Umbrian or P dialects.
Robert Kirk when he profaned it by walking on it; or we may equate the American hill with the fairy-haunted Slieve Gullion and Ben Bulbin in Ireland.
The idealistic philosophy of Germany in the early nineteenth century endeavored again to equate the ideals of a free and complete development of cultured personality with social discipline and political subordination.
Plato had the ideal of an education which should equate individual realization and social coherency and stability.
I answered, "This described would equate to clinical.
However, to equate nursing's humanistic character solely with an overflowing of the milk of human kindness is a serious error of oversimplification.
If I am a clinician, then "how" I am in the health-nursing situation would equate to "clinical.
Finally I understood: no one was saying that any one term could equate any particular or group of {98} nursing situations.
In other words, taxes and profits, by the operation of the laws of human nature, constantly tend to equate themselves.
The variant form Banjoora in 3 seems to be the same as the Banjoor of the Kangulu, which again has Koorpal in common with 4, and also Kearra, if we may equate the latter with Kuialla.
The Marroong of 2 seems to be the Maringo of 9, and we may perhaps also equate the Kurbo of this group with the Kurpal of 4.
The fact, if correct, that with the Badieri Yungo is associated with Wutheru, and takes the place of the more usual Yungaru, suggests that we may equate the latter with Yungo.
Finally three of the four words mentioned seem to be compounded with a suffix; and if this is so it is clearly useless to equate them with words in which this suffix is a component part.
To equate these four names is a mark of transatlantic enthusiasm rather than of balanced judgment; but the estimate, so far as it concerns Skobeleff, reflects the opinion of nearly all who knew him[138].
The difficulty for Germany was, how to equate her world-wide ambitions with the restricted and diverse aims of Austria and Italy.
While we cannot equate parental action with divine action, nevertheless we can affirm that divine action takes place through human action.