relevance

relevance
noun
ADJECTIVE
considerable, great, wider
limited, marginal

This debate has limited relevance to our current concerns.

dubious, questionable
direct, immediate
continued, continuing

the continuing relevance of art to our daily lives

obvious
real
possible, potential
general
particular, special
contemporary

He claims that the laws are antiquated and have no contemporary relevance.

practical
political
VERB + RELEVANCE
be of, remain of

The book is of particular relevance to student nurses.

bear, have

The theory bears little relevance to practice.

lack, lose

Her ideas have lost all relevance to the modern world.

ensure

Constant revision of the curriculum must be undertaken to ensure its continuing relevance.

increase
see
demonstrate, establish

Skim the book in order to establish its relevance to your needs.

emphasize, underline (esp. BrE), underscore (AmE)

A Marxist approach emphasizes the relevance of class power.

assess, consider, examine, explore, judge
question
PREPOSITION
relevance for, relevance to

I can't see the relevance of his comment to the debate.


Collocations dictionary. 2013.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Relevance — is a term used to describe how pertinent, connected, or applicable something is to a given matter. A thing is relevant if it serves as a mean to a given purpose. Imagine a patient suffering a well defined disease such as scurvy caused by lack of… …   Wikipedia

  • relevance — rel·e·vance / re lə vəns/ n: the quality or state of being relevant: relation to the matter at hand ruled on the relevance of the testimony relevance in discovery has been broadly interpreted Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster.… …   Law dictionary

  • relevance — UK [ˈreləv(ə)ns] / US [ˈreləvəns] or relevancy UK [ˈreləv(ə)nsɪ] / US [ˈreləvənsɪ] noun [uncountable] ** the quality of being directly connected with and important to something else relevance of: I don t see the relevance of what you are saying.… …   English dictionary

  • Relevance — Rel e*vance (r?l ?*vans), Relevancy Rel e*van*cy ( van*s?), n. 1. The quality or state of being relevant; pertinency; applicability. [1913 Webster] Its answer little meaning, little relevancy bore. Poe. [1913 Webster] 2. (Scots Law) Sufficiency… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • relevance — first recorded in the 18c, has almost completely ousted the alternative form relevancy …   Modern English usage

  • relevance — n. 1) to have relevance to 2) of relevance to (his testimony is of no relevance to the case) * * * [ relɪv(ə)ns] to have relevance to of relevance to (his testimony is of no relevance to the case) …   Combinatory dictionary

  • relevance — rel|e|vance [ reləvəns ] or relevancy [ reləvənsi ] noun uncount ** the quality of being connected with and important to something else: relevance of: I don t see the relevance of what you are saying. of relevance to something: The course covers… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • relevance — [[t]re̱ləv(ə)ns[/t]] N UNCOUNT: with supp, oft N to n Something s relevance to a situation or person is its importance or significance in that situation or to that person. Politicians private lives have no relevance to their public roles... There …   English dictionary

  • relevance — noun Date: 1733 1. a. relation to the matter at hand b. practical and especially social applicability ; pertinence < giving relevance to college courses > 2. the ability (as of an information retrieval system) to retrieve material that satisfies… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • relevance — rel·e·vance (rĕlʹə vəns) n. 1. Pertinence to the matter at hand. 2. Applicability to social issues: a governmental policy lacking relevance. 3. Computer Science. The capability of a search engine or function to retrieve data appropriate to a user …   Universalium

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