English to Turkish Dictionary founders

founders

Kurucular
definition
verb
six drowned when the yacht foundered off the Florida coast
(of a ship) fill with water and sink.
noun
an iron founder
a person who manufactures articles of cast metal; the owner or operator of a foundry.
he was the founder of modern Costa Rica
a person who establishes an institution or settlement.
translation of 'founders'
verb
saplanıp kalmak,
boşa çıkmak,
yıkılmak,
çökmek,
batmak,
sakatlanmak
noun
dökümcü,
kurucu
example
But already the 'founders' have established two key areas of need - including facilities for young people.
The names of the 'founders' of some other, specific religious groups can often be found in the main statistical database, although that is not the purpose of that database.
The group 'founders' set the original rules, but they can be changed by vote of the active PMC members.
By 1840 business directories in New York City listed thirteen iron 'founders' , and sixteen the following year.
Archaeologists say they have unearthed Lupercale - the sacred cave where, according to legend, a she-wolf nursed the twin 'founders' of Rome and where the city itself was born.
But Mr Milner, director of Keighley iron 'founders' Leach and Thompson, said there were dozens of examples of manufacturers in the district switching jobs overseas.
We usually invest $6000n in each company, where n is the number of participating 'founders' .
If the current negotiations over a grand coalition should 'founder' , these plans could be quickly revived.
The South Island was formed, they say, when a canoe full of 150 gods 'foundered' on a reef.
Nearly a century later, sledding down the Horton, Vilhjalmur Stefansson learned of the Titanic's sinking a full three months and ten days after the ocean liner had 'foundered' in the North Atlantic.
In 1822 the Tek Sing 'foundered' on a reef off the Java coast and sank within minutes.
The scheme soon 'foundered' , being rejected by the colonial Premiers when they gathered in London for the two Colonial Conferences of 1887 and 1897.
The collector, who does not want to be named, told the Sunday Herald that despite checking with Titanic societies in the US and the UK, no other documents had been found stating that the ship could not 'founder' .
He played table tennis, tennis and cricket, and was one of the 'founder' members of Western Athletics Club when it was established in the late 1970s.
Some twenty Spanish ships 'foundered' on the west coast.
So many ships have 'foundered' along this coast, driven onto its reefs by storms or lured there by wreckers' lights, that pieces from Spanish galleons still wash up with the tide.
Recently, he 'foundered' in his left fore, which was very acute.
So our revolution continues, and our ideals must struggle against the human tendencies and the social forces that would cause our experiment to 'founder' and fail.
The Sydney, with superior speed and firepower, raked the German ship, which limped to North Keeling where she 'foundered' on the reef.
Wilks was a 'founder' member of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics.
Twenty Armada ships were to 'founder' on the Irish rocks.
But the plan 'foundered' when the owner refused to enter into any discussions and the council was unable to make any progress.
Rather than asking why the ship 'foundered' , Howell investigates how this maritime disaster acquired wider cultural and social significance in the years before World War I.
He was a 'founder' member of many scientific establishments, including the Paediatric Pathology Society and the Society for Research into Hydrocephalus and Spina Bifida.
an iron 'founder'
The association suggested the appointment of a further commissioner from a panel representing bus users but the proposal 'foundered' in the absence of more general support.
A letter written by a Titanic passenger who left the ship before it 'foundered' on its maiden voyage was sold for £13,000 at a Yorkshire auction yesterday.
He was also a 'founder' member of Clonmore Development Association, being its first chairman.
A 'founder' member of the original Bradford Festival committee, Dusty Rhodes, is now leading the Reclaim Bradford Festival campaign to bring the organisation back to local people.
Throughout the 1990s, under the previous administration - which is no longer giving support to this moratorium - those proposals 'foundered' .
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