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Japanese Sentences with English Translations - Sentences [目的]

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Many people drift through life without a purpose.
The following verbs only take the to-infinitive as their object.
I had only one aim in throwing everything away to run this restaurant.
The relative pronoun 'that' has two states, a nominative case and objective case, but there is no possessive case.
With verbs there are intransitive verbs that don't take an object, and transitive verbs that do take an object.
A complete intransitive verb takes neither complement nor object.
Actually there are many cases where it isn't 'have=object, done=causative verb'.
The object is that which in Japanese would generally be indicated with "ni" or "o".
'That' has only the two cases, nominative and objective, and it does not inflect depending on the case.
The traveler reached his destination at last.
What's the purpose of your trip?
A good purpose makes hard work a pleasure.
Leisure has been viewed as a means to an end.
The question is not what education is for so much as how you go about it.
We played catch to achieve the goal.
I found it difficult to achieve my purpose.
It looked tough to achieve his aim.
The end does not necessarily justify the means.
The end justifies the means.
Does the end justify the means?

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