tragedy

listen to the pronunciation of tragedy
الإنجليزية - التركية
felaket

Savaşın felaketi unutulmamalı. - The tragedy of war must not be forgotten.

facia

ABD'nin Irakta yaptığı şey hakkında çok üzgünüm. Bu savaş herkes için bir faciaydı. - I'm very sorry about what the U.S. has done in Iraq. This war has been a tragedy for everyone.

Dua ve dileklerim bu korkunç faciadan tüm etkilenmişler için. - My thoughts and prayers are with all those who were affected by this terrible tragedy.

trajedi

Onun ani ölümü bir trajedi idi. - His sudden death was a tragedy.

Yetenekli dedektif trajedinin nedenini araştırmak üzere atanmıştır. - The capable detective was assigned to investigate the cause of the tragedy.

ağlatı
{i} facia, çok üzüntü veren acıklı olay
{i} tiy. trajedi, tragedya, facia, ağlatı
{i} felâket

Savaşın felaketi unutulmamalı. - The tragedy of war must not be forgotten.

tragedya
tragedy of the commons
(Ekonomi) Maliyetleri herkes tarafından ortak karşılanan kamu mallarının, en fazla kullananın en fazla faydayı alacağı inancıyla aşırı kullanılması

One of the reasons of the govermental fail is the common ownership called tragedy of commons.

result in a tragedy
acı son ile bitmek
result in a tragedy
acı sonla bitmek
humanitarian tragedy
insanlık dramı
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
A disastrous event, especially one involving great loss of life or injury
The genre of such works, and the art of producing them
A drama or similar work, in which the main character is brought to ruin or otherwise suffers the extreme consequences of some tragic flaw or weakness of character
{n} a serious drama, a mournful event
a drama in which a character (usually a good and noble person of high rank) is brought to a disastrous end in his or her confrontation with a superior force (fortune, the gods, social forces, universal values), but also comes to understand the meaning of his or her deeds and to accept an appropriate punishment Often the protagonist's downfall is a direct result of a fatal flaw in his or her character Close Window
A dramatic poem, composed in elevated style, representing a signal action performed by some person or persons, and having a fatal issue; that species of drama which represents the sad or terrible phases of character and life
{i} dramatic composition with an unhappy ending portraying a conflict between the protagonist and destiny or circumstances; literary creation in this form; disaster, calamity
A serious drama in which the principal character is often brought to disaster by his/her hamartia, or tragic flaw
A fatal and mournful event; any event in which human lives are lost by human violence, more especially by unauthorized violence
Tragedy is a type of literature, especially drama, that is serious and sad, and often ends with the death of the main character. The story has elements of tragedy and farce. Drama of a serious and dignified character that typically describes the development of a conflict between the protagonist and a superior force (such as destiny, circumstance, or society) and reaches a sorrowful or disastrous conclusion. Tragedy of a high order has been created in three periods and locales, each with a characteristic emphasis and style: Attica, in Greece, in the 5th century BC; Elizabethan and Jacobean England (1558-1625); and 17th-century France. The idea of tragedy also found embodiment in other literary forms, especially the novel. See also comedy
a story about the loss of happiness, bliss, or idealized existence
A medieval narrative poem or tale typically describing the downfall of a great person; a drama, usually in verse, portraying a conflict between a strong-willed protagonist and a superior force such as destiny, culminating in death or disaster (See also Lay, Ballad) (Compare Chanson de Geste, Epic, Epopee, Epos, Hamartia, Heroic Quatrain)
an event resulting in great loss and misfortune; "the whole city was affected by the irremediable calamity"; "the earthquake was a disaster"
A work that presents serious or sad events
A tragedy is an extremely sad event or situation. They have suffered an enormous personal tragedy Maskell's life had not been without tragedy
drama in which the protagonist is overcome by some superior force or circumstance; excites terror or pity
A literary work that begins in prosperity and happiness and ends in adversity or misery
A play where a main character declines in status to ultimate destruction, due to character flaws
The goat-song (Greek, tragos-ode) The song that wins the goat as a prize This is the explanation given by Horace ( De Arte Poetica, 220) (See Comedy ) Tragedy The first English tragedy of any merit was Gorboduc, written by Thomas Norton and Thomas Sackville (See Ralph Roister Doister The Father of Tragedy AEschylos the Athenian (B C 525-426 ) Thespis, the Richardson of Athens, who went about in a waggon with his strolling players, was the first to introduce dialogue in the choral odes, and is therefore not unfrequently called the “Father of Tragedy or the Drama ” “Thespis was first who all besmeared with lee, Began this pleasure for posterity ” Dryden: Art of Poetry (Tragedy), c iii Father of French Tragedy Garnier (1534-1590)
tragedy of the commons
(Ekonomi) The Tragedy of the Commons is a type of social trap, often economic, that involves a conflict over resources between individual interests and the common good. The "Tragedy of the Commons" is a structural relationship between free access to, and unrestricted demand for a finite resource. The term derives originally from a comparison noticed by William Forster Lloyd with medieval village land holding in his 1833 book on population. It was then popularized and extended by Garrett Hardin in his 1968 Science essay "The Tragedy of the Commons." However, the theory itself is as old as Thucydides and Aristotle, the latter of whom said "that which is common to the greatest number has the least care bestowed upon it."
tragedy of the commons
Overuse of a common resource relative to its economically efficient use (p 481)
tragedy of the commons
(chapter 5) A term coined by Garrett Hardin for excessive appropriation from a common-pool resource that occurs because (1) each user imposes appropriation externalities on the others, and (2) governance structures that might limit appropriation to sustainable levels are inadequate or lacking See the "rent dissipation" entry
tragedy of the commons
the idea that no one takes responsibility for things that everybody owns
tragedy of the commons
An inexorable process of degradation of communal resources due to selfish self-interest of "free riders" who use or destroy more than their fair share of common property See open access system
tragedy of the commons
Thought experiment in which demonstrates that any ethics is mistaken if it allows a growing population to steadily increase its exploitation of the ecosystem which supports it An Abstract of "A General Statement of Hardin's Tragedy of the Commons"
tragedy of the commons
overuse of common resources that creates undesirable outcomes for society (chapter 15)
tragedy of the commons
Garett Hardin's famous essay (first described by William Forster Lloyd) explaining how a pasture managed as a "commons" will be overgrazed because the costs are shared by all, while most benefits are collected by the greedy
tragedy of the commons
Excessive use of an open access resource to the point where the resource is damaged or destroyed
Greek tragedy
ancient Greek dramas in which the protagonist meets with disaster
Jonestown Tragedy
1978 mass suicide in Guyana by members of the religious cult "The People's Temple" in which the leader Jim Jones ordered members to drink cyanide-laced punch
domestic tragedy
Drama in which the main characters are ordinary people. This form of tragedy contrasts with Classical tragedy, in which the main characters are of royal or aristocratic rank. An early domestic tragedy, A Warning for Faire Women (1599), deals with the murder of a merchant by his wife. The form became popular in the mid-18th century and reached its maturity in the 19th-century bourgeois tragedies of Henrik Ibsen. Gerhart Hauptmann, Eugene O'Neill, and Arthur Miller wrote important 20th-century domestic tragedies
tragedies
plural of tragedy
tragedy

    الواصلة

    trag·e·dy

    التركية النطق

    träcıdi

    النطق

    /ˈtraʤədē/ /ˈtræʤədiː/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ 'tra-j&-dE ] (noun.) 14th century. From Middle English tragedie Old French tragedie Latin tragedia Ancient Greek τραγωδία (tragodia, “epic play, tragedy”), from τράγος (tragos, “male goat”) + ᾠδή (ōidē, “song”), a reference to the goat-satyrs of the theatrical plays of the Dorians.

    فيديوهات

    ... lost in this tragedy. We ' we think of their families and care for them deeply. There were ...
    ... bomb. Syria ' Syria's not just a tragedy of 30,000 civilians being killed by a military, ...
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