Has the same goals?
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 39 answers to crossword clue "Has the same goals?"
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AnswerCrossword Clue
AGREESHas the same view
TIESHas the same goals?
HOMOLOGUEThat which has the same value as something else.
ABLEIt has the same meaning if "cap" is added
DMAJIt has the same key signature as B min.
KISSBand whose makeup has stayed the same over the years?
KISSRock band whose makeup has stayed the same over the years
namesakesA person or thing that has the same name as another
siblingone who has the same parents as another, also SIB, SIBB
retracedGo back over (the same route that one has just taken)
sibone who has the same parents as another, also SIBLING, SIBB
retraceGo back over (the same route that one has just taken)
sibbone who has the same parents as another, also SIBLING, SIB
retracingGo back over (the same route that one has just taken)
siblingsSIBLING, one who has the same parents as another, also SIB, SIBB
sibbsSIBB, one who has the same parents as another, also SIBLING, SIB
sibsSIB, one who has the same parents as another, also SIBLING, SIBB
WACOCity with a radio station that has the same call letters as the city's name
brerbrother (a male sibling (one who has the same parents as another, also SIB, SIBB))
frerebrother (a male sibling (one who has the same parents as another, also SIB, SIBB))
brethrenBROTHER, a male sibling (one who has the same parents as another, also SIB, SIBB)
contoursA line joining points on a diagram at which some property has the same value
brersBRER, brother (a male sibling (one who has the same parents as another, also SIB, SIBB))
freresFRERE, brother (a male sibling (one who has the same parents as another, also SIB, SIBB))
ARSENEPremier League manager Wenger (the club he manages has the same first five letters as his first name)
brotherto treat like a brother / a male sibling (one who has the same parents as another, also SIB, SIBB)
isotropic(of an object or substance) Having a physical property that has the same value when measured in different directions
trigamistone who has been married three times; also, one who has three husbands or three wives at the same time
synonymsA taxonomic name that has the same application as another, esp. one that has been superseded and is no longer valid
trigamistsTRIGAMIST, one who has been married three times; also, one who has three husbands or three wives at the same time
FASTEDDIEFELSON1961 and 1986 Oscar-nominated role for Paul Newman (only five times has the same actor been nominated for the same role in two films)
sidesaddleA saddle in which the rider has both feet on the same side of the horse. It is typically used by a woman rider wearing a skirt
tokenedan individual instance: if the same sentence has different truth-values on different occasions of utterance the truth-value may be said to attach to the sentence-token
ergativepertaining to a type of language that has an ergative case or in which the direct object of a transitive verb has the same form as the subject of an intransitive verb
complement(in systemic grammar) An adjective or noun that has the same reference as either the subject (as mad in he is mad) or the object (as mad in he drove her mad)
complements(in systemic grammar) An adjective or noun that has the same reference as either the subject (as mad in he is mad) or the object (as mad in he drove her mad)
antiparticlesA subatomic particle having the same mass as a given particle but opposite electric or magnetic properties. Every kind of subatomic particle has a corresponding antiparticle, e.g., the positron has the same mass as the electron but an equal and opposite charge
antiparticleA subatomic particle having the same mass as a given particle but opposite electric or magnetic properties. Every kind of subatomic particle has a corresponding antiparticle, e.g., the positron has the same mass as the electron but an equal and opposite charge
fractalsA curve or geometric figure, each part of which has the same statistical character as the whole. Fractals are useful in modeling structures (such as eroded coastlines or snowflakes) in which similar patterns recur at progressively smaller scales, and in describing partly random or chaotic phenomena such as crystal growth, fluid turbulence, and galaxy formation