relate
41relate to someone — relate to (someone) to understand and feel sympathy for someone. The kids need a teacher who can relate to them …
42relate to something — relate to (something) to feel that you understand a situation. You re looking for a job? I can relate to that! …
43relate ideas — index converse Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
44relate back — re·late back vi re·lat·ed back, re·lat·ing back: to apply or take effect retroactively esp. based on relation back the amendment relates back to the date of the original pleading Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 15(c) Merriam Webster’s… …
45Relate Institute — The Relate Institute is a department of Doncaster College providing courses at Higher Education, Further Education, and Continuous Professional Development level, in relationship studies. It is a collaborative project between Relate, Doncaster… …
46relate to sth — UK US relate to sth Phrasal Verb with relate({{}}/rɪˈleɪt/ verb ► to be directly connected to something, or to refer directly to it: »How closely do its prices relate to its costs? »Everything we are going to discuss today basically relates to… …
47relate to something — reˈlate to sth/sb derived 1. to be connected with sth/sb; to refer to sth/sb • We shall discuss the problem as it relates to our specific case. • The second paragraph relates to the situation in Scotland. 2. to be able to understand and have… …
48relate to somebody — reˈlate to sth/sb derived 1. to be connected with sth/sb; to refer to sth/sb • We shall discuss the problem as it relates to our specific case. • The second paragraph relates to the situation in Scotland. 2. to be able to understand and have… …
49relate to that — know about that, have experienced that He said he was afraid to speak in public. I can relate to that …
50relate — verb /riˈleɪt/ a) To tell in a descriptive way. b) To give an association. Syn: chronicle, describe, divulge …