C2 verb #15,000 よく出る 3分で読める

equate

To equate means to say two things are the same. You can say, 'I equate apples with fruit.' It is like saying A equals B. Use this word when you want to compare things you think are the same.

When you equate two things, you think they are the same value or meaning. For example, some people equate working hard with being happy. It is a good way to talk about your opinions on different topics.

The verb equate is used to describe a mental connection between two distinct concepts. It is very common in discussions about values. For example, 'We should not equate wealth with intelligence.' It helps clarify what you believe is truly important versus what is just a surface-level similarity.

In B2 English, you use equate to challenge common assumptions. It is frequently used in essays and debates to argue that two things are incorrectly linked. 'Many people equate technology with progress, but that is not always true.' It adds nuance to your arguments by showing you can distinguish between related but different ideas.

At the C1 level, equate is used to analyze abstract relationships. You might discuss how society equates consumption with status, or how legal systems equate intent with guilt. It is a precise tool for academic discourse, allowing you to deconstruct complex societal frameworks and challenge the validity of certain perceived equivalencies.

At the C2 level, equate becomes a tool for philosophical and literary critique. You might explore how authors equate nature with divinity or how historical figures equate power with morality. Its usage here is nuanced, often implying that the act of equating is a subjective, human-made construct rather than an objective truth. It allows for the exploration of how language shapes our perception of reality.

equate 30秒で

  • Means to consider as equal.
  • Commonly used with 'with'.
  • Verb form only.
  • Useful for comparing concepts.

When you equate two things, you are essentially saying that they are the same in your mind. It is a powerful way to draw comparisons between concepts that might not seem related at first glance.

You might hear someone say, 'Don't equate money with happiness.' This means they believe those two things are fundamentally different, even if some people try to link them. It is a very common word in debates, philosophy, and everyday arguments.

Think of it as a mental scale. When you equate items, you are placing them on opposite sides of that scale and declaring that they balance out perfectly. It is a useful verb for clarifying your values and beliefs to others.

The word equate comes from the Latin word aequare, which means 'to make level' or 'to make equal.' This root is the same one that gives us the word 'equal' and 'equation.'

It entered the English language in the 17th century. During that time, it was used primarily in mathematical contexts to describe the process of setting two expressions as equal. Over time, the usage expanded from simple numbers to abstract ideas and human behaviors.

It is fascinating how a word rooted in math became a staple for discussing emotions and social values. It shows how language evolves to help us express complex connections between the things we experience in life.

You will most often see equate used with the preposition with. For example, 'People often equate fame with success.' This indicates that the speaker is observing a common, though perhaps incorrect, association.

In formal writing, you can use it to explain complex theories. In casual conversation, it helps you express your personal opinion about how things should be viewed. It is a versatile word that fits almost any register.

Common collocations include 'equate X with Y' or 'equate X to Y.' While 'with' is more common in modern English, both are widely understood. Just be sure to keep your objects clear so your listener knows exactly what you are comparing.

While 'equate' itself is not an idiom, it appears in many common phrases used to set boundaries. 1. Equate to nothing: To have no value or impact. 2. Equate in the eyes of: To be seen as the same by a specific person. 3. Equate the two: To compare two specific items. 4. Not to be equated with: A formal way to say something is not the same. 5. Equate for the sake of argument: To temporarily treat things as equal to test a theory.

The word equate is a regular verb. Its past tense is equated and its present participle is equating. It is almost always used as a transitive verb, meaning it needs an object to follow it.

Pronunciation: In British English, it is /ɪˈkweɪt/. In American English, it is /ɪˈkweɪt/. The stress is on the second syllable. Rhyming words include create, debate, relate, state, and plate.

Remember that it is a stative verb in many contexts, as it describes a mental state of belief rather than a physical action. This is why you will rarely see it used in continuous tenses like 'I am equating.'

豆知識

It shares a root with 'adequate'.

発音ガイド

UK /ɪˈkweɪt/
US /ɪˈkweɪt/
韻が合う語
create debate relate state plate
よくある間違い
  • pronouncing as 'e-kwat'
  • stressing the first syllable
  • forgetting the 't' sound

難易度

読解 2/5

easy to read

ライティング 3/5

requires object

スピーキング 2/5

easy to use

リスニング 2/5

common word

次に学ぶべきこと

前提知識

equal same compare

次に学ぶ

equation equivalence equitable

上級

correlation causation

知っておくべき文法

Transitive Verbs

I equate X with Y.

Stative Verbs

I equate.

Prepositional Phrases

with happiness

レベル別の例文

1

I equate red with love.

red = love

equate + with

2

Do not equate them.

don't mix

imperative

3

I equate rain with cold.

rain = cold

equate + with

4

They equate dogs with friends.

dog = friend

subject + verb

5

We equate sun with fun.

sun = fun

simple present

6

She equates books with joy.

book = joy

singular subject

7

He equates fast with good.

fast = good

adjective usage

8

I equate home with peace.

home = peace

simple sentence

1

People equate money with power.

2

Do not equate price with quality.

3

I equate summer with the beach.

4

Many equate silence with boredom.

5

We should not equate age with wisdom.

6

He equates effort with success.

7

She equates music with relaxation.

8

They equate travel with learning.

1

Don't equate being busy with being productive.

2

Some people equate luxury with happiness.

3

We cannot equate these two situations.

4

He tends to equate criticism with failure.

5

Do not equate popularity with talent.

6

I equate his behavior with arrogance.

7

Society often equates youth with beauty.

8

One should not equate power with authority.

1

It is a mistake to equate economic growth with social progress.

2

Many critics equate the film with a masterpiece.

3

You cannot equate the two experiences; they are vastly different.

4

She equates her professional identity with her personal worth.

5

Do not equate silence with agreement.

6

Historians often equate this period with a time of great change.

7

They equate the new policy with a step backward.

8

We must not equate change with improvement.

1

The author equates the protagonist's journey with a spiritual awakening.

2

It is problematic to equate political dissent with treason.

3

One might equate the current crisis with the events of the 1930s.

4

The philosophy equates virtue with knowledge.

5

We should avoid equating correlation with causation.

6

She equates the sensation of loss with a physical weight.

7

The law does not equate negligence with malice.

8

Many equate the digital age with the end of privacy.

1

The poet equates the fleeting nature of life with the falling of autumn leaves.

2

To equate the state with the individual is a dangerous political fallacy.

3

He equates the sublime with the terrifying beauty of the storm.

4

The text equates the divine with the infinite.

5

One could equate the silence of the room with a heavy anticipation.

6

The scholar equates the rise of the empire with its eventual moral decay.

7

They equate the act of creation with a form of rebellion.

8

The narrative equates the protagonist's internal struggle with the external conflict.

反対語

よく使う組み合わせ

equate with
equate to
tend to equate
often equate
wrong to equate
equate concepts
equate values
equate importance
equate status
equate experiences

慣用句と表現

"equate to zero"

to have no value

His efforts equated to zero.

casual

"equate in the eyes of"

seen the same by others

They are equated in the eyes of the law.

formal

"equate the two"

to compare

I can't equate the two.

neutral

"not to be equated with"

do not confuse with

This is not to be equated with failure.

formal

"equate for the sake of"

assume equality for argument

Let's equate them for the sake of the argument.

neutral

"equate the outcome"

to balance the result

They equate the outcome to luck.

neutral

間違えやすい

equate vs equal

similar root

equal is state, equate is process

They are equal (state) vs I equate them (process).

equate vs equate

similar spelling

equate is verb, equation is noun

I equate them vs The equation is hard.

equate vs compare

similar meaning

compare looks at differences too

Compare the two vs Equate the two.

equate vs liken

similar meaning

liken is more literary

Liken life to a game.

文型パターン

A1

Subject + equate + object + with + object

I equate work with stress.

B1

It is wrong to + equate + object + with + object

It is wrong to equate them.

B2

People + tend to + equate + object + with + object

People tend to equate fame with success.

C1

One should not + equate + object + with + object

One should not equate power with morality.

C2

The author + equates + object + with + object

The author equates love with pain.

語族

名詞

equation a mathematical statement

動詞

equalize to make equal

形容詞

equal the same

関連

equity fairness

使い方

frequency

7

よくある間違い
  • equating to with with equate with

    While both are used, 'with' is much more common for abstract concepts.

  • equating as equate with

    You don't 'equate as' something.

  • using as a noun equation

    Equate is a verb only.

  • equating between equate with

    You equate X with Y, not between X and Y.

  • missing the object equate X with Y

    It is a transitive verb; it needs an object.

ヒント

💡

Memory Palace Trick

Imagine a scale with two items.

💡

When Native Speakers Use It

To challenge assumptions.

🌍

Cultural Insight

Used in social critique.

💡

Grammar Shortcut

Always use with an object.

💡

Say It Right

Stress the second syllable.

💡

Don't Make This Mistake

Don't use it as a noun.

💡

Did You Know?

Shares roots with 'equal'.

💡

Study Smart

Use it in your own sentences.

💡

Register Tip

Good for essays.

💡

Preposition Tip

Prefer 'with'.

暗記しよう

記憶術

E-QUATE: Equal-ATE (Eat).

視覚的連想

A balance scale.

Word Web

equal balance compare same

チャレンジ

Write three things you equate with happiness.

語源

Latin

元の意味: to make equal

文化的な背景

None.

Commonly used in political debates to challenge opponents.

Used in many logic textbooks.

実生活で練習する

実際の使用場面

at work

  • equate effort with results
  • equate time with money
  • equate quality with cost

school

  • equate variables
  • equate expressions
  • equate concepts

debates

  • do not equate these
  • cannot equate the two
  • equate for argument

daily life

  • equate rain with sadness
  • equate food with comfort
  • equate home with safety

会話のきっかけ

"What do you equate with success?"

"Do you equate money with happiness?"

"Why do people equate fame with talent?"

"Can we equate the two situations?"

"What do you equate with home?"

日記のテーマ

Write about something you used to equate with happiness.

Discuss why people equate status with money.

Is it fair to equate two different cultures?

Describe what you equate with peace.

よくある質問

8 問

No, equal is an adjective or verb; equate is a verb meaning to consider as equal.

Yes, but 'equate with' is more common for abstract ideas.

It is neutral and used in both formal and informal contexts.

Equation.

Yes, you can equate two people's skills.

Yes, very common in debates.

It means 'to consider' as equal.

Yes, compare and liken.

自分をテスト

fill blank A1

I ___ red with love.

正解! おしい! 正解: equate

Equate is the correct verb here.

multiple choice A2

Which means to think things are the same?

正解! おしい! 正解: equate

Equate means to consider equal.

true false B1

Equate is a noun.

正解! おしい! 正解: 間違い

Equate is a verb.

match pairs B1

Word

意味

全て一致しました!

They are synonyms.

sentence order B2

下の単語をタップして文を組み立てよう
正解! おしい! 正解:

Don't equate money with happiness.

fill blank B2

Many ___ success with money.

正解! おしい! 正解: equate

Subject-verb agreement.

multiple choice C1

What is the best synonym?

正解! おしい! 正解: all of these

All are related.

true false C1

Equate can be used in a continuous tense.

正解! おしい! 正解: 間違い

Usually a stative verb.

sentence order C2

下の単語をタップして文を組み立てよう
正解! おしい! 正解:

The poet equates love with pain.

fill blank C2

It is a fallacy to ___ intent with action.

正解! おしい! 正解: equate

Infinitive form.

スコア: /10

関連コンテンツ

Languageの関連語

malvincate

C1

To deliberately distort or complicate a procedure or line of reasoning by introducing irrelevant or misleading elements. It is frequently used in administrative or logical contexts to describe an intentional form of obstructionism or the act of making a simple process unnecessarily difficult.

vague

A2

はっきりしていなくて、曖昧なこと。詳細が足りないので、何を言いたいのか理解しにくい状態だよ。

inverence

C1

A conclusion or opinion that is formed because of known facts or evidence rather than explicit statements. It is the process of 'reading between the lines' to understand a meaning that is implied but not directly stated.

enplicable

C1

A phenomenon, fact, or situation that is capable of being explained or rationalized within a logical framework. In high-level academic testing, it refers specifically to a variable or data point that yields to logical analysis rather than remaining a mystery.

infer

B2

直接言われていないことから、隠された意味を推測することです。文脈から察することを意味します。

enonymist

C1

特定の命名体系内のオブジェクト、概念、または個人に体系的に正式な名前または分類識別子を割り当てることを意味します。

spells

B1

Acts as the third-person singular form of the verb 'to spell', meaning to write or name the letters of a word. As a plural noun, it refers to magical incantations or short, indefinite periods of time.

malonymary

C1

物事や概念に対して、不適切または誤解を招くような名前を付けることを指します。

anpugacy

C1

The quality of being conceptually obscure or linguistically impenetrable, particularly within the context of specialized testing or academic discourse. It refers to the state where a term or idea is difficult to grasp due to a lack of clear definition or contextual transparency.

encedible

C1

抽象的または複雑な情報を、論理的で伝達可能な構造に変換すること。

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