English to Punjabi Dictionary equivalence

equivalence

ਬਰਾਬਰੀ
definition
noun
The Court began by setting out the principle of national procedural autonomy, as qualified by the conditions of equivalence and practical possibility.
the condition of being equal or equivalent in value, worth, function, etc..
example
knowledge of 'equivalence' of units is required
All placebo controlled trials were positive and all comparative trials indicated 'equivalence' with other active therapies.
At a deeper level, the moral equivalence that values each human being equally, is based on a deeper lack of moral 'equivalence' .
Lack of measurement 'equivalence' is often referred to as measurement bias.
Saladin and Richard certainly knew about truce and parley in one era of technological 'equivalence' between their two civilisations.
We submit it is plainly wrong to apply any doctrine of functional 'equivalence' , as their Honours plainly did.
Just as, during the Cold War, the majority felt that there wasn't much to choose between the two superpowers, so today a similar moral 'equivalence' also has its grip on the party.
Their doctrine of moral 'equivalence' couldn't survive equal scrutiny.
He gave necessary and sufficient conditions for the linear 'equivalence' of two curves on a surface F in 1905.
Although the primary outcome (respiratory function) may be assumed to have 'equivalence' , adverse effects are much less well reported.
The obvious answer is that the Charter could make real the commitment to 'equivalence' in the Agreement.
The Court began by setting out the principle of national procedural autonomy, as qualified by the conditions of 'equivalence' and practical possibility.
What is bothering me is that issue of lack of moral 'equivalence' .
This controls for functional 'equivalence' but not for sequence similarity.
Sending simpler entities may still give the receiver an adequate level of functional 'equivalence' from the exchange.
The size of neuron clusters that we have successfully recreated in terms of functional 'equivalence' is also scaling up exponentially.
The basic 'equivalence' is that one year's heavy dust exposure equates to one year's average smoking.
The relationship between culture and society is not, as Okri appears to suggest, one of strict 'equivalence' , as in great society equals great culture.
If you talk about the big boys they may just talk about you in return, producing a sense of 'equivalence' in the process.
Before and after studies may also show a lack of 'equivalence' between comparators, and interventions may vary.
But it has done so only by recapitulating the ancient and damaging 'equivalences' between male and culture, female and nature.
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