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- correlated vs interrelated | WordReference Forums
Spending is usually "correlated" with income Frost damage is "correlated" with weather conditions We can say that the presence of fridges in houses is correlated with the presence of televisions in the same houses, because the more likely you are to have one, the more likely you are to have the other : their occurrence is "correlated"
- correlate lt;to with gt; - WordReference Forums
" There, it's usually in the passive: "Annual plant growth in tons per acre is highly [or strongly] correlated with annual rainfall (r = 85) but only weakly with mean annual temperature (r = 23) "* The example in post #4 seems to be a less mathematical use of the verb "to correlate "
- correlated to or with | WordReference Forums
"Correlated to" is standard, but I don't think anyone would raise an eyebrow at "correlated with," unless
- correlate to correlate with | WordReference Forums
Happiness is correlated with income Height is correlated with weight When using the noun correlation, the preposition between is used Some examples: There is a strong correlation between height and weight The correlation between happiness and income needs further testing
- correlated and related | WordReference Forums
“correlated is more technical or scientific, and usually describes trends or patterns that move in the same direction obesity is correlated with the number of calories you eat the length of the day is correlated with the time of year related is more general, and just means that two things are similar, or share something in common, or are
- when one thing increases, the other increases as well
Hello, is there any word to describe two things that change together? I mean when one of them increases, the other increases as well, and vice versa Like the relationship between eating food and weight, as eating increases so does weight, Thanks
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