US /ɑn e pɑr/
・UK /ɔn ə pɑ:/
We are now, Nicole, on a par with the great financial crisis and then the pandemic, and then in the third, in recent time, this downturn, this man-made downturn from the tariffs.
We are now, Nicole, on a par with the great financial crisis, um, and then the pandemic, and
For an intelligent species, building a Dyson Sphere is a technological leap on a par with the discovery of fire for our ancestors.
For an intelligent species, building a Dyson Sphere is a technological leap on a par with the discovery of fire for our ancestors.
Some technologists argue that the internet is an innovation on a par with the introduction of electricity.
innovation on a par of the introduction of electricity.
For Kant, morally speaking, suicide is on a par with murder.
It's on a par with murder because what we violate when we take a life, when we take someone's life, ours or somebody else's, we use that person.
You're almost on a par with Russia itself, whose whole economy, economy is now on a war footing.
You're almost on a par with Russia itself, whose whole economy is now on a war footing.
But she said proscription, which put it on a par with Islamic State or Al Qaeda, was disproportionate.
But she said prescription, which put it on a par with Islamic State or Al-Qaeda, was disproportionate.
In this respect, the house was much on a par with the Country, which did very often disinherit its sons for suggesting improvements in laws and customs that had long been highly objectionable,
In this respect the House was much on a par
The country's density of people is about on a par with India,
The country's density of people is about on a par with India.
Oman's score in the Corruption Perceptions Index is about on a par with Italy, which is much, much better than being the fifth lowest in the entire world.
Oman's score on the Corruption Perceptions Index is about on a par with Italy, which is much, much better than being the fifth lowest in the entire world.
This is also one of the big reasons why Vietnam score on the World Bank's Human Capital Index, which combines indicators of health and education into a measure of the human capital that a child born today can expect to obtain by their 18th birthday, is somewhat astonishingly on a par with that of the US and Luxembourg, despite being many times poorer.
This is also one of the big reasons why Vietnam's score on the World Bank's Human Capital Index, which combines indicators of health and education into a measure of the human capital that a child born today can expect to obtain by their 18th birthday, is somewhat astonishingly on a par with that of the US and Luxembourg, despite being many times poorer.