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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "relate to" in a sentence

    relate to example sentences

    relate to


    1. do with how we relate to God and how He


    2. ‘Yes, there was something about her that I could relate to … I still don’t know what it was … a vulnerability, I suppose


    3. How does this relate to fear? You may have heard it said that every moment in life offers you a choice: you can come from ―love‖ or ―fear


    4. Second, you will begin to relate to your thoughts, feelings, and fears differently


    5. 7) Individuals are to relate to one another on an individual basis rather than


    6. Atums as They Relate to Magic Elements:


    7. Atums as They Relate to Spells:


    8. Atums as They Relate to Behavior:


    9. Atums as They Relate to Aumentation:


    10. Atums as They Relate to the Occult:

    11. Atums as They Relate to Ritual:


    12. Atums as They Relate to the Church:


    13. ‘It’s funny … we know he was referring to the war which was looming but it could relate to any two lovers in any time


    14. So Ben has discovered the wonder of Easter – hmm, maybe you’re not doing so bad at this parenting lark, though the next few years are going to be difficult without a male role model for him to relate to


    15. ” George promptly began to relate to White Feathers all that had been spoken and so did not hear what next was said next, but Belle heard every word


    16. How could he relate to steel and plastic corridors, silicon mind and the power structure when he was adrift in a field of violet blooms in the golden light of Kortrax? How could he relate to orders given by a starship captain frozen in stone when there was a golden-skinned naked girl on him, swaying to the rhythm of mental drums, beckoning him into her arms, into her body?


    17. a painful maneuver that I’m sure Ed Pentoch could relate to


    18. She was now able to relate to circumstances which she was held back from before


    19. I felt excited, like a child, and for some unknown reason I couldn’t relate to the danger that I was about to put us in


    20. chancing on an excuse that he could readily relate to

    21. Based on my freshman year experience I can really relate to homeless people and people who don't have enough money to buy food because I had no money and I didn't know anybody I could even borrow some money from to buy any food over Thanksgiving because they had all left and gone to be with their families or whatever so I was basically home alone in that dorm room


    22. She can't relate to life on this planet


    23. It is some what curious that, though their opinions are so very different, their facts, so far as they relate to the price of corn at least, should coincide so very exactly


    24. They'll be able to relate to Kassidor a lot better


    25. I prayed that he’d relate to my present mischief too in some


    26. Then, only then, will you relate to my


    27. and some tasks that relate to each other


    28. relate to each other


    29. I could relate to feeling lost and alone, while being surrounded by a darkness that threatened to consume me


    30. It does not, perhaps, relate to the present subject, but I cannot help remarking it, that very old families, such as have possessed some considerable estate from father to son for many successive generations, are very rare in commercial countries

    31. The man took a deep breath and finally regained enough composure to look the officer in the eyes and relate to him what they had just seen


    32. He explained that such questions did not relate to the goal, and were not fundamental to the holy life


    33. A particular examination of the nature of the corn trade, and of the principal British laws which relate to it, will sufficiently demonstrate the truth of this assertion


    34. Although we may have travelled to the Moon, our solar system’s size, compared to the size of the Universe, does not provide us with any mentionable mobility with which we would be able to perform measurements, which could relate to the distances that we are dealing with


    35. “Listen up lads what I am about to relate to you is not just for when you are on sentry duty but for anytime


    36. films together," Maybe Bradlee would find films easier to relate to than computer games


    37. Proving the validity of the information contained in the book, which relates to our physical world in the present day, as well as to historic events and other aspects, which can be analysed conclusively; we will have a solid foundation from where we can also relate to the information relating to situations, which we cannot validate


    38. Often the surface text would either relate to the phrase or further expound it


    39. Once this is done, the user can then search for additional terms which may also relate to the subject and see if they appear in the matrix


    40. This does not in any way relate to the sequence of events in Genesis, where God describes his creative works to us, but specifically the purpose of the Earth

    41. Let us consider some other facts mentioned in the Bible that relate to God, the Creation and the differences when compared to the Evolution Theory


    42. ‘OK, I can relate to that


    43. What in the world gives these demented liberals of twenty-first century America the right, with a straight face, to tell us that their programs in any way relate to progress? Perhaps we should instead try regress, to the days when the Emperor, King, or feudal lord prescribed our lives for us


    44. Was that what it seemed like to him? How could she relate to someone who saw everything as a battlefield?


    45. We should all stand on guard against falling prey to unwarranted suspicions as they oftentimes relate to other people who may


    46. Perhaps that was part of the ―glamour‖ that attracted the working classes who were able to ―connect‖, in some manner, with hungry boxers fighting for nominal purses; average Joes that they could otherwise relate to


    47. Although I firmly agree that professionalism is a function of character rather than appearance, I am equally inclined to support the notion that many individuals (including yours truly) require (some) structure in their lives and that the degree an employee adopts a more casual approach to his or her personal appearance, he or she will likely to adopt similar (laid-back) attitudes as they relate to work; that is to say, that the one arguably feeds off the other


    48. As such sentiments relate to the latter, the perception that financial support hasn‘t been freely offered but ‖coerced‖, rather, enhances some of the passions indicated above


    49. Jury Selection continues to reinforce the notion…raising disturbing questions…as they relate to trial by one‘s peers, ―impartially‖


    50. Such principles, as they relate to Equal (Civil) Rights, for example, are recognized by social and political conventions allowing every individual, who is legally registered, for example, the right to vote or a licensed driver the right to own or operate an automobile or a prospective home buyer, with sufficient capital or credit, the right to purchase a house or a condo or whatever falls within his or her means














































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    Synonyms for "relate to"

    concern pertain to depend upon implicate apply to include belong to