I'm having trouble recognizing your correlate.
I'm currently trying to correlate the actions of the various factions in their respective drives toward reaching a peaceful settlement of their hostilities in the region.
Geologists try to correlate earthquakes with movements along existing fault lines. The odds of success does not always correlate with the amount of effort applied.
The results of the two tests correlate to a high degree.
The accountant is trying to correlate this year's figures with last year's.
Yes, correlate is correct
Both "correlate with" and "correlate to" are commonly used and generally accepted. However, "correlate with" is more frequently used in scientific contexts to indicate a relationship between two things, while "correlate to" is less common but can still convey a similar meaning in certain contexts.
How do you put dissent in a sentence How do you put dissent in a sentence
i can put nomad in a sentence
can you put "leadership" in sentence
How do you put disease in a sentence
You have just put this into a sentence.
You put a period at the end of the sentence to indicate that the sentence has ended.
That is the correct spelling of correlate (associate, match up).