Correspond in a sentence as a verb

Compelling individuals to hand over their own correspondence is, as far as we know, hard.

A difference of .0025% would correspond to the neutrinos arriving 4 years earlier!

Trying to make it correspond to "real" objects is about as hopeless as basing literature on coloring books.

The pieces of this argument fit together very neatly, but the problem is that they don't correspond to reality.

I met a programmer the other day who works in a related field, and he categorically states he never wants to meet or correspond with Jake.

When those variations correspond to effects that a subject or researcher has been primed to expect, the subject or researcher is more likely to notice that effect.

The reason why the Mercator projection was popular for so long is that its angles correspond to compass points and you navigate by a trivial algorithm:1.

The fact that the basis of scales is the set of simple harmonic ratios of an initial pitch has been asserted by theorists for centuries, and that is what these star-convex structures correspond to.

Here's an ironic aside about the lengths people have gone to to make 1px correspond as closely as possible to a real pixel: As you say, 'marking a button as "width: 1cm" will almost never render something over 1cm of the screen geometry'.

So despite the fact that the wavefunction has a time dependence, your measurement probability distribution functions do not!Now the other thing you need to know is that so far these stationary states all correspond to ground states.

The models we create to explain observed phenomena are not direct reflections of reality, they are simply characteristically human, linguistic models that correspond to our observations.

Solar PV panels have highly nonlinear voltage/current characteristics, which means that increased voltage does not correspond to increased power, especially in setups such as the tree where the solar panels are not uniformly illuminated.

This doesn't explain the zigzagging trajectory of the plane after its disappearance:Indeed, soon after MH370 disappeared, reports emerged that recordings of Malaysian military radar returns showed an unidentified track that could correspond to the flight turning left onto a westward course and descending.

I'd point out that Page and Brin predicted the course of their own search engine, and perhaps their own company, in 1998:“The goals of the advertising business model do not always correspond to providing quality search to users.”“We expect that advertising funded search engines will be inherently biased towards the advertisers and away from the needs of the consumers.”“Advertising income often provides an incentive to provide poor quality search results.”"Since it is very difficult even for experts to evaluate search engines, search engine bias is particularly insidious.

What service are you running where the "overwhelming number of [y]our users" tell you that phone is their preferred method of contact?As I wrote on the blog, email allows me to: - respond when it’s convenient for me.\n - keep most of my attention on what I’m doing.\n - archive and share the correspondence easily.\n - filter content I don’t want to hear anymore.\n - remain anonymous.\n - make careful, researched, edited responses.\n - include screenshots, links to videos, and other files which might be helpful.\n - continue to correspond if I loose my hearing and/or speaking abilities.\n\nI’m not hearing impaired, and I much prefer email.

Correspond definitions

verb

be compatible, similar or consistent; coincide in their characteristics; "The two stories don't agree in many details"; "The handwriting checks with the signature on the check"; "The suspect's fingerprints don't match those on the gun"

See also: match check jibe gibe tally agree

verb

be equivalent or parallel, in mathematics

See also: equate

verb

exchange messages; "My Russian pen pal and I have been corresponding for several years"

verb

take the place of or be parallel or equivalent to; "Because of the sound changes in the course of history, an 'h' in Greek stands for an 's' in Latin"

See also: represent