MEDIATE vs MIDDLE: NOUN
- N/A
- A centre, midpoint
- The middle part of the human body; the waist.
- Something intermediate between extremes.
- An area or a point equidistant between extremes; a center.
- The middle voice.
- A verb form in the middle voice.
- An area that is approximately central within some larger region
- Time between the beginning and the end of a temporal period
- An intermediate part or section
- The middle area of the human torso (usually in front)
- The point or part equally distant from the extremities, limits, of extremes; a mean.
- An intervening point or part in space, time, or arrangement; something intermediate.
- In logic, same as middle term.
- In grammar, same as middle voice. See I., 3.
- A middle term.
- Synonyms Center, Midst, Middle. Center is a precise word, ordinarily applied to circular, globular, or regular bodies: as, the center of a circle, globe, field; but it is used wherever a similar exactness appears to exist: as, the center of a crowd. Midst regards the person or thing as enveloped or surrounded on all sides, especially by that which is close upon him or it, thick or dense: as, in the midst of the forest, the waves, troubles, one's thoughts. Except as thus modified by the idea of envelopment or close environment, the old idea of midst as meaning the middle point (see Gen. i. 6; Josh. vii. 23; 1 Ki. xxii. 35) is quite obsolete. Midst is very often used abstractly or figuratively, center rarely, middle never. Middle is often applied to extent in only-one direction: as, the middle of the street, of a block of houses, of a string; it is often less precise than center: compare the center and the middle of a room.
MEDIATE vs MIDDLE: ADJECTIVE
- Acting through or dependent on an intervening agency
- Being in a middle position.
- Intermediate between extremes
- Acting through a mediating agency
- Gained or effected by a medium or condition.
- Acting by means, or by an intervening cause or instrument; not direct or immediate; acting or suffering through an intervening agent or condition.
- Being between the two extremes; middle; interposed; intervening; intermediate.
- Being neither at the beginning nor at the end in a series
- Being at neither one extreme nor the other, as of a sequence or scale; intermediate.
- Equally distant from extremes or limits; central.
- Being neither at the beginning nor at the end in a series
- Of a stage in the development of a language or literature between earlier and later stages
- Between an earlier and a later period of time
- Of, relating to, or being a verb form or voice in which the subject both performs and is affected by the action specified.
- Equally distant from the extreme either of a number of things or of one thing; mean; medial
- The period of time intervening between the decline of the Roman Empire and the revival of letters. Hallam regards it as beginning with the sixth and ending with the fifteenth century.
- In England, people who have an intermediate position between the aristocracy and the artisan class. It includes professional men, bankers, merchants, and small landed proprietors.
- See Middle-ground.
- See English, n., 2.
- China.
- That part of the distillate obtained from coal tar which passes over between 170° and 230° Centigrade; -- distinguished from the light oil, and the heavy oil or dead oil.
- In the slave trade, that part of the Atlantic Ocean between Africa and the West Indies.
- Same as King-post.
- New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware; which, at the time of the formation of the Union, occupied a middle position between the Eastern States (or New England) and the Southern States.
- That term of a syllogism with which the two extremes are separately compared, and by means of which they are brought together in the conclusion.
- Intermediate; intervening.
- See under Voice.
- The men on watch during that time.
- A pugilist, boxer, or wrestler classed as of medium weight, i. e., over 140 and not over 160 lbs., in distinction from those classed as light weights, heavy weights, etc.
- Of or relating to a division of geologic time between an earlier and a later division.
- A subdued or neutral tint.
MEDIATE vs MIDDLE: VERB
- To intervene between conflicting parties in order to resolve differences or bring about a settlement
- To resolve differences, or to bring about a settlement, between conflicting parties
- Occupy an intermediate or middle position or form a connecting link or stage between two others
- Act between parties with a view to reconciling differences
- N/A
MEDIATE vs MIDDLE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To have a relation to two differing persons, groups, or things.
- To settle or reconcile differences.
- To work with two or more disputants in order to bring about an agreement, settlement, or compromise.
- To interpose between parties, as the equal friend of each, esp. for the purpose of effecting a reconciliation or agreement.
- To be in the middle, or between two; to intervene.
- To convey (a force) between subatomic particles.
- To effect or convey as an intermediate agent or mechanism.
- To resolve or settle (differences) by working with all the conflicting parties.
- N/A
MEDIATE vs MIDDLE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To divide into two equal parts.
- To effect by mediation or interposition; to bring about as a mediator, instrument, or means.
- To fold in the middle.
- To place in the middle.
MEDIATE vs MIDDLE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To divide into two equal or approximately equal parts.
- To further by interceding, or by acting as a mediator.
- To harmonize; reconcile; settle, as a dispute, by intervention.
- To effect a relation between or a transition from, as between two things, or from one thing to another; bring into relation by some intervening means or process.
- To effect by intervention, interposition, or any intermediary action.
- Synonyms See interposition.
- Situated between two extremes; lying in the middle; intermediate; intervening.
- Acting as a means or medium; not direct or immediate in operation; not final or ultimate.
- Effected by or due to the intervention of a mean or medium; derived from or dependent upon some intervening thing or act; not primary, direct, or independent.
- To occupy an intermediate place or position; be interposed; have the position of a mean.
- To have the function of a mean or means; effect a connection between other things, or a transition from one to the other.
- To intervene for the purpose of reconciliation; act as an intermediary for the settlement of a disagreement or discord; intercede.
- In spiritualism, specifically, to act as a medium.
- To take an intermediate stand; act moderately; avoid extremes.
- To set or place in the middle. Specifically
- In foot-ball, to kick or drive (the ball) into the middle, so that it may be kicked through the goal.
- To balance or compromise.
- To ascertain or mark the middle of (as of a line), by doubling or otherwise; fold in the middle; double, as a rope.
- Equally distant from the extremes or limits; mean; middling: as, the middle point of a line; the middle time of life.
- Intervening; intermediate.
- In grammar: Intermediale between active and passive: applied to a body of verb-forms of which the office is more or less distinctly reflexive, or denotes the subject as acting on or for or with reference to itself, often answering to an English intransitive verb: as, middle voice, middle ending, middle tense.
- Intermediate between smooth (unaspirated) and rough (aspirated): as, a middle (medial) mute. See mute, n
- Nautical, a shallow place, as a bank or bar.
- Equally distant from the extremes
- Put in the middle
- The point between the beginning and the end of a temporal period or process
- (idiom) (in the middle) Engaged in doing something.
- (idiom) (in the middle) In a difficult situation.
MEDIATE vs MIDDLE: RELATED WORDS
- Adjudicate, Reconcile, Conciliate, Negotiate, Intervene, Resolve, Mediator, Mediation, In between, Intermediate, Middle, Indirect, Liaise, Intercede, Arbitrate
- Centre, In between, Mediate, Eye, Junior high, Intervening, Heart, Midriff, Central, Center, Midway, Intermediate, Halfway, Midsection, Mid
MEDIATE vs MIDDLE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Mitigate, Intermediary, Attenuate, Facilitate, Adjudicate, Reconcile, Conciliate, Negotiate, Mediator, Mediation, In between, Intermediate, Middle, Indirect, Liaise
- Midpoint, Centre, In between, Mediate, Eye, Junior high, Intervening, Heart, Midriff, Central, Center, Midway, Intermediate, Halfway, Mid
MEDIATE vs MIDDLE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- In the event an early morning mediate family.
- Mediate on behalf of residential clients when appropriate.
- Mediate disputes between tenants, landlords, and property managers.
- Moses should only mediate what Yhwh tells him.
- Though a mediate touch of what is holy will not makeholy, yet will not a mediate touch of what is polluted defile?
- AGREEMENT TO MEDIATE This AGREEMENT TO MEDIATE is signed by the parties and the mediator to create and clarify the mediation relationship.
- Mediate BC has asked interested mediators to apply and will select applicants based on the criteria developed jointly by Mediate BC and the CRT.
- Moreover, Machiavellian behaviors should mediate the positive effect of envy on status, whereas psychopathic behaviors should mediate a negative effect.
- EALTO, the EALTO shall mediate the dispute if the Board requires its members to mediate.
- Also termed mediate evidence; mediate testimony; substitutionary evidence.
- Please be on the look out for more details about the opening of middle school for blended learning middle school students.
- Middle class families and those who wish to be middle class have certain common aspirations for themselves and their children.
- Important formative years, Mitkof Middle school located in eagle River and Mitkof Middle school is at.
- Educational debt is an idea that is ingrained in the lower middle class and middle class.
- Congratulating Wester Middle School in Frisco on being named a School to Watch by the Texas Middle School Association.
- Middle class, even before there was a name for middle class.
- Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools, Middle States Commission on Higher Education.
- Acre lot in middle to upper middle income area of Inland Empire.
- Cane Ridge Middle would relieve pressure at Antioch Middle.
- Alameda Middle School; Franklin Middle School; Hawthorne Middle School; Irving Middle School; Elementary Schools.
MEDIATE vs MIDDLE: QUESTIONS
- Does dysfunctional cortical inhibition mediate schizophrenia symptoms?
- Can exercise video games mediate physical activity?
- Does demoralization mediate or suppress sleep disturbances?
- Does cute aggression mediate overwhelming emotions?
- Can supramolecular assemblies mediate chemical reactivity?
- Does friendship jealousy mediate relational aggression?
- Can Cre recombinase mediate chromosomal translocation?
- Does triiodothyronine mediate the calorigenic response?
- Does ionophore withdrawal mediate antibiotic resistance?
- Should third parties mediate intractable conflicts?
- Which middle colony was owned by Holland originally?
- What religions promote misogyny in the Middle Ages?
- Why are Middle Easterners boycotting French products?
- Which religion influenced the Middle Eastern culture?
- Do Bulgarians look Mediterranean or Middle Eastern?
- When does forestforest middle school registration open?
- Do Ashkenazi Jews consider themselves Middle Eastern?
- Why were the Middle Colonies known as the Middle Colonies?
- Why was Middle earth called Middle earth in The Lord of the Rings?
- Are middle adults raising small children in middle adulthood?