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Word Meanings - MEDIATE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

1. Being between the two extremes; middle; interposed; intervening; intermediate. Prior. 2. Acting by means, or by an intervening cause or instrument; not direct or immediate; acting or suffering through an intervening agent or condition. 3. Gained

Additional info about word: MEDIATE

1. Being between the two extremes; middle; interposed; intervening; intermediate. Prior. 2. Acting by means, or by an intervening cause or instrument; not direct or immediate; acting or suffering through an intervening agent or condition. 3. Gained or effected by a medium or condition. Bacon. An act of mediate knowledge is complex. Sir W. Hamilton.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of MEDIATE)

Related words: (words related to MEDIATE)

  • CENTRALLY
    In a central manner or situation.
  • PLEADINGS
    The mutual pleas and replies of the plaintiff and defendant, or written statements of the parties in support of their claims, proceeding from the declaration of the plaintiff, until issue is joined, and the question made to rest on some
  • ADVOCATE
    advocatus, one summoned or called to another; properly the p. p. of advocare to call to, call to one's aid; ad + vocare to call. See 1. One who pleads the cause of another. Specifically: One who pleads the cause of another before a tribunal or
  • PLEADINGLY
    In a pleading manner.
  • CONVENIENTLY
    In a convenient manner, form, or situation; without difficulty.
  • INSERT
    To set within something; to put or thrust in; to introduce; to cause to enter, or be included, or contained; as, to insert a scion in a stock; to insert a letter, word, or passage in a composition; to insert an advertisement in a newspaper. These
  • INTERPOSER
    One who, or that which, interposes or intervenes; an obstacle or interruption; a mediator or agent between parties. Shak.
  • INTERVENER
    One who intervenes; especially , a person who assumes a part in a suit between others.
  • MEDDLER
    One who meddles; one who interferes or busies himself with things in which he has no concern; an officious person; a busybody.
  • PLEAD
    To present an answer, by allegation of fact, to the declaration of a plaintiff; to deny the plaintiff's declaration and demand, or to allege facts which show that ought not to recover in the suit; in a less strict sense, to make an allegation of
  • PLEADER
    One who draws up or forms pleas; the draughtsman of pleas or pleadings in the widest sense; as, a special pleader. (more info) 1. One who pleads; one who argues for or against; an advotate. So fair a pleader any cause may gain. Dryden.
  • CENTRAL; CENTRALE
    The central, or one of the central, bones of the carpus or or tarsus. In the tarsus of man it is represented by the navicular.
  • CENTRALITY
    The state of being central; tendency towards a center. Meantime there is a great centrality, a centripetence equal to the centrifugence. R. W. Emerson.
  • INTERCEDE
    1. To pass between; to intervene. He supposed that a vast period interceded between that origination and the age wherein he lived. Sir M. Hale. 2. To act between parties with a view to reconcile differences; to make intercession; to beg or plead
  • INTRODUCEMENT
    Introduction.
  • MEDDLESOME
    Given to meddling; apt to interpose in the affairs of others; officiously intrusive. -- Med"dle*some*ness, n.
  • CENTRALIZE
    To draw or bring to a center point; to gather into or about a center; to bring into one system, or under one control. centralize the power of government. Bancroft.
  • CENTRAL
    Relating to the center; situated in or near the center or middle; containing the center; of or pertaining to the parts near the center; equidistant or equally accessible from certain points. Central force , a force acting upon a body towards or
  • CENTRALIZATION
    The act or process of centralizing, or the state of being centralized; the act or process of combining or reducing several parts into a whole; as, the centralization of power in the general government; the centralization of commerce in a city.
  • INSERTING
    1. A setting in. 2. Something inserted or set in, as lace, etc., in garments.
  • INTERMEDDLE
    To meddle with the affairs of others; to meddle officiously; to interpose or interfere improperly; to mix or meddle with. The practice of Spain hath been, by war and by conditions of treaty, to intermeddle with foreign states. Bacon. Syn. -- To
  • COUNTERPLEAD
    To plead the contrary of; to plead against; to deny.
  • REINSERT
    To insert again.
  • ENTERPLEAD
    See INTERPLEAD
  • IMPLEAD
    To institute and prosecute a suit against, in court; to sue or prosecute at law; hence, to accuse; to impeach.
  • NEURO-CENTRAL
    Between the neural arch and the centrum of a vertebra; as, the neurocentral suture. Huxley.
  • IMMEDIATE
    1. Not separated in respect to place by anything intervening; proximate; close; as, immediate contact. You are the most immediate to our throne. Shak. 2. Not deferred by an interval of time; present; instant. "Assemble we immediate council." Shak.
  • UNICENTRAL
    Having a single center of growth. Unicentral development, that form of development which takes place primarily around a single central point, as in the lowest of unicellular organisms.

 

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