That would be remarkable for any nation, but especially for one so closely equated with happiness as Bhutan.
Prof Burgess said higher marks could possibly be equated to improvements in the quality of teaching.
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For men in particular, having more of everything is equated with being more potent.
The term shopping has gotten somewhat of a bad rap, being equated with a sort of mindless consumerism.
They announced record production in their last quarter which equated to about 23% growth over the prior year.
That will not happen so long as bankruptcy is still equated with disgrace, worthy in some cases of suicide.
The Conservative-controlled council said it equated to one in six staff and about a third would be senior managers.
The social norm of individual responsibility must be equated with purchasing health insurance.
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Some of these talking heads have equated holding gold to also having an arsenal of guns in their home.
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Traditionally, law students have equated best jobs with highest-paying jobs, career counselors say.
These numbers equated to nearly one billion potential impressions being created with a reach of more than 130 million people.
In tracing developments from 1500 to 2000, it equated a nation's gross national product with its military, political and economic prowess.
He told the assembly this equated to more than 150 empty schools.
BBC: Education minister says school closures may be necessary
Across the globe, it appears more and more that what you pay in taxes is somehow equated with your level of patriotism.
Once our critter brain has equated a particular phenomenon with safety or with survival, it will continue to carry out that program.
In financial markets, the word is nearly always equated with information disclosure.
Ever since then, politicians have equated homeownership with the American Dream and fallen all over themselves to demonstrate their fierce dedication to it.
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"She equated the proposed title with being able to tell people what to do, " recalls Susan Heathfield, a human-resources consultant in Williamston, Mich.
Rugby Football Union chief disciplinary officer Judge Jeff Blackett had equated the offence to abuse of a match official, a position Armitage rejected.
Until the late 1970s, German suffering was regularly equated with the suffering of the Jews in the Holocaust in public rituals and monuments.
The Department for Culture, Media and Sport said the government's allocation equated to less than 0.1% of the total tickets available for the Games.
Bank loan officers must feel like Marriner Eccles, the Depression-era Federal Reserve chairman who famously equated the Fed's stimulus efforts with pushing on a string.
It was equated with civilization, with pleasure, with wealth, with happiness.
The former commanding general of U.S. forces in both Iraq and Afghanistan equated the situation in Syria today with one of the most deadly nuclear accidents in history.
This misconception arose when early biographers equated French and English feet.
That equated to a small rise in disposable income during those months, which may have just done enough to offset the current rise in gasoline prices.
Love is a universal experience and in many place love is equated with marriage, so emotionally people come to understand love and marriage in that way.
Besides, samurai believe it is better to fight to a tragic and noble end than to surrender (which, in the corporate world, is equated with being acquired).
Prosecutors said police analysts found the CCTV was created five months later as "the shadows cast across his drive equated with July 2011 rather than February 2011".
With the rise of dollar pizza, "I'm worried that our slice will be equated with that slice, when it's a totally different deal, " said Pino "Joe" Pozzuoli Jr.
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