Which is correct:
"This is for a more thorough equitative consideration."
or
"This is for a more thoroughly equitative consideration."
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THANK YOU.
Christine Christie equitative I could not find this in a dictionary except in one, which defined it as "related to horsemanship". I don't think you're talking about horses. "equative" exists as a grammatical term, but I don't think you mean that either.
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Christine Christieequitative
I could not find this in a dictionary except in one, which defined it as "related to horsemanship". I don't think you're talking about horses.
"equative" exists as a grammatical term, but I don't think you mean that either. (The winner is Jill is an equative sentence.)
Christine Christie