relevance in the PONS Dictionary

relevance Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

relevance in law
relevance to the issue of the case
relevance to the issue of the case

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Sometimes the score of a game can have relevance to gameplay.
en.wikipedia.org
This is the constitutive feature of proletarian art, which accounts for the political relevance of his decorations.
en.wikipedia.org
For non-ergodic systems there is no general reason why expectation values should have any relevance.
en.wikipedia.org
This has led humanity to frequently miss much of the everyday relevance of philosophical ideas to real life.
en.wikipedia.org
Its high-level working groups discuss specific policy areas of relevance to the business and policy community.
en.wikipedia.org
Two concepts: relevance and uncertainty, define an individual's need for orientation.
en.wikipedia.org
They believe that it has increasing relevance with the rapid growth of capitalist globalization.
en.wikipedia.org
Clinical relevance of cranial nerve injury following carotid endarterectomy.
en.wikipedia.org
Every student can understand the relevance of each lesson to their daily lives.
en.wikipedia.org
The journal publishes first-rate undergraduate research from all over the world on topics with sociological relevance, broadly defined.
en.wikipedia.org

Would you like to add some words, phrases or translations?

Just let us know. We look forward to hearing from you.

Choose your language Deutsch | български | English | Français | Italiano | Polski | Русский