Examples of using Common purpose in English and their translations into Turkish
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
-
Programming
Our common purpose.
That is linked to another for a common purpose.
And… a common purpose.
Meaning… that I was hoping we could develop a common purpose.
And a… And a common purpose.
Whatever problem is between you, you both have a common purpose.
And a common purpose. And a….
Now, we must summon that same sense of common purpose.
And A Common Purpose. And… And A.
But we have a common purpose.
The common purpose of hating people that are different than you works pretty well, too.
There was no common purpose.
Each entity iscapable of individual behaviour,… yet they all act with a common purpose.
A crowd has a common purpose.
Yet again we find ourselves the unlikeliest of allies joined together in common purpose.
But we have a common purpose.
Common purpose. for self-government built from shared values, Scrappy revolutionaries rejecting monarchy.
But we have a common purpose, we share Jon.
Yet again we find ourselves the unlikeliest of allies joined together in common purpose. Come on.
So we have a common purpose. Precisely.
Nothing brings a community together like the common purpose of football.
But we all have a common purpose which is to succeed as an organization.
Then we are here on common purpose friend.
Joint Enterprise, or Common Purpose, a law introduced in the 18th century to stop the aristocracy from duelling, is now being used increasingly against young people from our council estates.
Gvero and Miletic"were members of, and knowingly participated in,a joint criminal enterprise and operation, the common purpose of which was to force the Muslim population out of the Srebrenica and Zepa enclaves," the ICTY statement said.
Precisely, we have a common purpose, let's exploit each other.
Yet they all act with a common purpose. of individual behaviour,… Each entity is capable.
As 2 countries with shared values and common purposes.: The Prime Minister, Alec Beasley, today described Britain and America.