Any one form may, by suitable processes, be transformed, wholly or in part, to an equivalent amount of any other form of energy.
The law of the transformation of energy is "the enunciation of the empirical fact that in general any one form of energy may by suitable processes be transformed, wholly or in part, to anequivalent amount in any other given form.
These notes, therefore, perform all the functions of currency, and render an equivalent amount of money, which was previously in circulation, unnecessary.
A sum equivalent to 26 per cent of the value of her exports, or alternatively an equivalent amount as fixed in accordance with any other index proposed by Germany and accepted by the Commission.
A further sum equivalent to 1 per cent of the value of her exports as above defined, or alternatively an equivalent amount fixed as provided in (b) above.
As a rule, it is found both with juices from top and bottom yeast that the evolution of carbon dioxide from glycogen proceeds less rapidly and reaches a lower total than from an equivalent amount of glucose.
Given the pyruvic acid, there is no doubt that yeast is provided with a mechanism capable of decomposing it at the same rate as an equivalent amount of sugar.
Zinc dissolves at the anode, an equal amount of zinc replaces an equivalent amount of copper on the other side of the porous partition, and the same amount of copper is deposited on the cathode.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "equivalent amount" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.