Synonyms of the word fudge: fake, misrepresent avoid, embellish, embroider, equivocate, evade, exaggerate, falsify, hedge, magnify, overstate, patch, shuffle, slant, stall
Not every relation is a function. But every function is a relation. Function is just a part of relation.
The cubic function.
Range
A formula or graph are two ways to describe a math function. How a math function is described depends on the domain of the function or the complexity of the function.
Please don't equivocate, tell me what you really think.
To talk or act insincerely or misleadingly, to equivocate.
The word "equivocate" is a verb meaning to avoid making a clear statement by saying something that has more than one possible meaning; to use ambiguous language so as to conceal the truth; a word for an action.Examples:"The politician was known to equivocate if asked about gay marriage.""I didn't like her new hairdo, but it was better to equivocate.""Please don't equivocate, tell me what you really think."
The word that means to speak evasively is "equivocate."
to avoid, to dodge, to escape, to elude, to shirk, to equivocate, to prevaricate
The past participle is equivocated. The present participle is equivocating.
Equivocate is making a statement that circumvents an outright statement of the truth.
Displacement doesn't directly equivocate to horsepower.
Synonyms of the word fudge: fake, misrepresent avoid, embellish, embroider, equivocate, evade, exaggerate, falsify, hedge, magnify, overstate, patch, shuffle, slant, stall
It can be, as a form of the verb "to waffle" meaning to waver, vacillate, or equivocate on a position.E.g The candidate waffles on the subject of illegal immigration.(* in British usage, it is more synonymous with blathering or circumlocution)Otherwise, waffles is a plural noun for a breakfast food.
William Lloyd Garrison fought against slavery by creating an antislavery newspaper. Also he quoted "I do not wish to speak, or write with moderation... I am earnest. I will not equivocate, I will not excuse, I will not retreat a single inch and I WILL BE HEARD."
No. In the very first issue of his anti-slavery newspaper, the Liberator, William Lloyd Garrison stated, "I do not wish to think, or speak, or write, with moderation. . . . I am in earnest -- I will not equivocate -- I will not excuse -- I will not retreat a single inch -- AND I WILL BE HEARD."