The Collaborative International Dictionary
Equivalency \E*quiv"a*len*cy\, n. Same as Equivalence.
Wiktionary
alt. 1 (context countable English) An equivalent thing. 2 (context uncountable English) equivalence n. 1 (context countable English) An equivalent thing. 2 (context uncountable English) equivalence
Usage examples of "equivalency".
In 1937, after passing a high school equivalency test, Charles started working on a degree in chemical engineering at Johns Hopkins University.
Bill was a big, tough man with black hair, built like a truck, and not fat even after fifty, He had left high school for the Navy in the eleventh grade with his father's permission, and he had clawed his way up from there, picking up his diploma at the age of twenty-four on a high school equivalency test taken almost as an afterthought.
Each card of the complete deck could be flexed into two alternate faces, and the Ghost Trump had fifteen flexes plus a Table of Equivalencies enabling the reader to adapt the deck to Spheres not directly represented, such as her own Mintaka.
Yet she realized now that there were fundamental equivalencies between her mind and that of her innocent host.
Which, in the much-argued and protested Equivalencies, was a rank just under Maj.
Nav One and Com One—no credence at all to the Equivalencies that the Fleet had had settled on them.
All of Hesper's data-analogies and equivalencies have turned out to be smack-on-the-nose accurate.
He had enlisted in the navy at seventeen and earned his high school equivalency diploma during his first tour of sea duty.