çalışanlar grubu

listen to the pronunciation of çalışanlar grubu
التركية - الإنجليزية
commune
A small community, often rural, whose members share in the ownership of property, and in the division of labour; the members of such a community
{n} a territorial district in France
{v} to converse, confer, examine
Communion; sympathetic intercourse or conversation between friends
If you say that someone is communing with an animal or spirit, or with nature, you mean that they appear to be communicating with it. She would happily trot behind him as he set off to commune with nature. Group of people living together who hold property in common and live according to a set of principles usually arrived at or endorsed by the group. The utopian socialism of Robert Dale Owen and others led to experimental communities of this sort in the early 19th century in Britain and the U.S., including New Harmony, Brook Farm, and the Oneida Community. Many communes are inspired by religious principles; monastic life is essentially communal (see monasticism). B. F. Skinner's Walden Two (1948) inspired many American attempts at communal living, especially in the late 1960s and early 1970s. See also collective farm, communitarianism, kibbutz, moshav. In medieval European history, a town that acquired self-governing municipal institutions. Most such towns were defined by an oath binding the citizens or burghers of the town to mutual protection and assistance. The group became an association able to own property, make agreements, exercise jurisdiction over members, and exercise governmental powers. Communes were particularly strong in northern and central Italy, where the lack of a powerful central government allowed them to develop into independent city-states. Those of France and Germany were more often limited to local government
receive Communion, in the Catholic church
A commune is a group of people who live together and share everything. Mack lived in a commune
{i} group of people living together and sharing possessions and labor; group of people that share a common interest; conversation, exchange of thoughts and ideas
To be together with; to contemplate or absorb
(Biological) An interrelated and interdependent assemblage of plants and animals
To converse together with sympathy and confidence; to interchange sentiments or feelings; to take counsel
{f} exchange thoughts and ideas, talk intimately
the name usually given by historians to the more or less formal organization of the people of a town or rural district in the Middle Ages The most common contemporary name for what is now called a commune was universitas (Latin) or its derivatives, a generic word for many kinds of association (What we now call a 'university' was distinguished by the term universitas studiorum, an 'association for studies' ) Communes were most important in European history between the eleventh and fifteenth centuries
A local political division in many European countries
To receive the communion; to partake of the eucharist or Lord's supper
a body of people or families living together and sharing everything
Absolute municipal self- government
In France and some other countries, a commune is a town, village, or area which has its own council
çalışanlar grubu
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