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more equal
adjective as in alike
Strong matches
adjective as in fair, unbiased
Strongest match
Strong matches
Example Sentences
Rather than being far-fetched, he thinks that it can help imagine a bolder and more equal future for his city.
“It’s not something that will change the course of the war, but I think it will make our forces more equal.”
That stopped holding water once Trump came into office and declared certain types of Americans to be unequal – those pesky “enemies from within” — and some to be more equal than others.
The revolution of 1776 emerged in part from a rejection of the feudal class divisions that existed in Europe, and European thinkers like Alexis de Tocqueville, seeing a place where such divisions had vanished, wrote that people in America were "seen to be more equal in fortune and intelligence — more equally strong, in other words — than they were in any other country, or were at any other time in recorded history."
In May, Instagram announced changes to its system for recommending content, particularly video, to "give all creators a more equal chance of breaking through".
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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