تعريف middle في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- Central to
- the middle stump
- The central part of a human body
- Being in the middle or in-between; as middle point, middle name, Middle English, Middle Ages, middle weight, etc
- A centre, midpoint
The middle of a circle is the point which has the same distance to every point of circle.
- The part between the beginning and the end
- {a} bewteen two, equally distant
- {n} the middle part, way or time
- equally distant from the extremes
- If you divide or split something down the middle, you divide or split it into two equal halves or groups. They agreed to split the bill down the middle = in half
- An offensive position that plays between handlers and deeps Occasionally make second cuts and endzone passes, most often ignored!
- {i} center point between two extremes; intermediate period; mean; half
- Equally distant from the extreme either of a number of things or of one thing; mean; medial; as, the middle house in a row; a middle rank or station in life; flowers of middle summer; men of middle age
- a school for pupils aged 9 - 13 years
- being neither at the beginning nor at the end in a series; "adolescence is an awkward in-between age"; "in a mediate position"; "the middle point on a line"
- the middle area of the human torso (usually in front); "young American women believe that a bare midriff is fashionable" an intermediate part or section; "A whole is that which has beginning, middle, and end"- Aristotle time between the beginning and the end of a temporal period; "the middle of the war"; "rain during the middle of April" put in the middle between an earlier and a later period of time; "in the middle years"; "in his middle thirties" of a stage in the development of a language or literature between earlier and later stages; "Middle English is the English language from about 1100 to 1500"; "Middle Gaelic
- The middle course or way is a moderate course of action that lies between two opposite and extreme courses. He favoured a middle course between free enterprise and state intervention
- put in the middle between an earlier and a later period of time; "in the middle years"; "in his middle thirties"
- the middle area of the human torso (usually in front); "young American women believe that a bare midriff is fashionable"
- {s} central; equally distant from two extremes, halfway; mean; mediocre
- either the middle-front or middle-back player
- an intermediate part or section; "A whole is that which has beginning, middle, and end"- Aristotle time between the beginning and the end of a temporal period; "the middle of the war"; "rain during the middle of April"
- time between the beginning and the end of a temporal period; "the middle of the war"; "rain during the middle of April"
- of a stage in the development of a language or literature between earlier and later stages; "Middle English is the English language from about 1100 to 1500"; "Middle Gaelic
- between an earlier and a later period of time; "in the middle years"; "in his middle thirties"
- the middle third of the blade, between foible and forte, sometimes held to be part of the foible
- The middle of an event or period of time is the part that comes after the first part and before the last part. I woke up in the middle of the night and could hear a tapping on the window It was now the middle of November, cold and often foggy Middle is also an adjective. The month began and ended quite dry, but the middle fortnight saw nearly 100mm of rain fall nationwide
- The middle object in a row of objects is the one that has an equal number of objects on each side. The middle button of his uniform jacket was strained over his belly. the middle finger of her left hand
- The middle of something is the part of it that is furthest from its edges, ends, or outside surface. Howard stood in the middle of the room sipping a cup of coffee Hyde accelerated away from the kerb, swerving out into the middle of the street Make sure the roast potatoes aren't raw in the middle. the middle of nowhere: see nowhere = centre
- If you are in the middle of doing something, you are busy doing it. It's a bit hectic. I'm in the middle of cooking for nine people. Middle West Middle Congo Middle Stone Age Middle Ages Middle East Middle English Middle East Treaty Organization
- the second comedian in the standard three comedian stand-up comedy show line-up
- The middle part of the case that holds the movement
- an area that is approximately central within some larger region; "it is in the center of town"; "they ran forward into the heart of the struggle"; "they were in the eye of the storm"
- put in the middle
- n either the middle-front or middle-back player
- Middle part of the case, in which the movement is fitted
- The middle third of the blade, between foible and forte
- Intermediate; intervening
- The point or part equally distant from the extremities or exterior limits, as of a line, a surface, or a solid; an intervening point or part in space, time, or order of series; the midst; central portion the waist
- an intermediate part or section; "A whole is that which has beginning, middle, and end"- Aristotle
- mid
He snuck up on him in the middle of the night.
- He sneaked up on him in the middle of the night.
He sneaked up on him in the middle of the night.
- He snuck up on him in the middle of the night.
- chu
- Middle Ages
- The period of time in Europe between the decline of the Roman Empire and the revival of letters (the Renaissance) or, according to Henry Hallam, the period beginning with the sixth and ending with the fifteenth century
She could see the town below her, nestled on top of a low hill, surrounded by a crenellated wall from the Middle Ages.
- Middle Armenian
- Middle period of the Armenian language, written down in the 11-17th centuries. Developed from Old Armenian, replaced by modern Armenian
- Middle Breton
- Extinct European language of the Brittonic subgroup of families, spoken in the North of France in the between the 11th and the 16th century AD
- Middle Chinese
- Chinese language spoken during Southern and Northern Dynasties and the Sui, Tang, and Song dynasties (6th century - 10th century)
- Middle Dutch
- Collective name for a number of closely related West Germanic dialects (whose ancestor was Old Dutch) which were spoken and written between 1150 and 1500 in the present-day Dutch-speaking area. There was at that time as yet no overarching standard language, but they were all mutually intelligible
- Middle Earth
- Alternative spelling of middle-earth
- Middle East
- The region comprising southwest Asia and northeast Africa
- Middle Eastern
- of, or relating to the Middle East
- Middle Easterner
- Someone from the Middle East
- Middle England
- the English Midlands
- Middle England
- the conservative white middle classes who live outside London, considered as a group
- Middle Englander
- A white, conservative, middle class member of Middle England
- Middle English
- The ancestor language of Modern English, spoken in England and parts of Scotland (where it became Lowland Scots) from about 1100 AD to 1500 AD. It developed from Anglo-Saxon, also called Old English, with heavy influence from French and Latin after the Norman invasion
- Middle French
- A historical division of the French language, spoken roughly from 1340 to 1610, during which French became established as the official language of France
- Middle High German
- An ancestor of the modern German language, and was spoken from 1050 to about 1500. Some linguists prefer to use 1350 as the end of the Middle High German period, calling the period from 1350 to 1750 Early New High German
- Middle Irish
- The Gaelic language spoken in Ireland during the 10th, 11th and 12th centuries
- Middle Kingdom
- A nickname for China
- Middle Kingdom
- Egypt in the 12th and 13th dynasties
- Middle Korean
- Korean in the 10th century to 16th century, or from the era of Goryeo to the middle of Joseon, based on the dialect of Kaesong because the new Goryeo dynasty moved its capital city to northern area of Korean peninsula
- Middle Latin
- A form of the Latin language used in the Middle Ages, primarily as a medium of scholarly exchange and as the liturgical language of the medieval Roman Catholic Church, but also as a language of science, literature, law, and administration
- Middle Low German
- A language that descended from Old Saxon and is the ancestor of modern Low German, spoken from about 1100 to 1600
The written language is nowhere spoken by the people; it was formed at the period when Luther, rejecting the Middle High and the Middle Low German, adopted in preference the dialect of Misnia or Meissen, which had begun to be written much later.
- Middle Norwegian
- The interim language in Norway between 1350 (the Black Plague) and 1525. An amalgam of Norwegian, Swedish and Danish, following Old Norse
- Middle Persian
- The ancestor of modern Persian spoken from around 300 BC till about 800 AD, evolving from Old Persian
- Middle Watut
- A language spoken in 7 villages of the Watut Valley in Papua New Guinea
- Middle Welsh
- the Welsh language as spoken from the 12th to 14th centuries
- Middle-earth
- The realm of mankind in Old English mythology
- Middle-earth
- The realm of the mankind or the planet Earth in Heathenry, used as an alternative to the Norse Midgard
- middle C
- A specific musical note, particularly the note C4, at approximately 261.6 hertz, appearing at the middle of the alto staff and directly between the treble and bass staves
- middle C
- The key on a piano or other keyboard instrument corresponding to this note
- middle C's
- plural form of middle C
- middle Cs
- plural form of middle C
- middle age
- the period of life between youth and old age; midlife
- middle bodies
- plural form of middle body
- middle body
- The midsection of the body
- middle body
- The part of a vessel adjacent to the midship section having a uniform or nearly uniform cross-section, usually referred to as the parallel middle body
- middle class
- A social and economic class lying above the working class and below the upper class
- middle class
- The groups in society composed of professionals, semi-professionals, and lower-to-middle managerial level workers
- middle classes
- plural form of middle class
- middle ear
- The cavity in the temporal bone between the eardrum and the inner ear that contains the ossicles, and which conveys sound to the cochlea
- middle ears
- plural form of middle ear
- middle eight
- The third of four eight-bar sections in thirty-two-bar-form (AABA-form) music
- middle finger
- An obscene gesture directed towards another as an insult
Her whole way of being is a big middle finger to the other guy.
- middle finger
- The finger between the forefinger and the ring finger; this is the longest finger
- middle fingers
- plural form of middle finger
- middle ground
- the middle distance
- middle ground
- a compromise position between extremes
Politicians seek middle ground in debate on imigration.
- middle infield
- The fielders near second base; the second baseman and shortstop
- middle infield
- The portion of the infield consisting of second base and home plate, including the catcher, second baseman, and shortstop
- middle infielder
- A player whose fielding position is in the middle infield (the second baseman and shortstop)
- middle infielders
- plural form of middle infielder
- middle management
- In a large organization, the group of managers or administrators who occupy positions in the company hierarchy which, generally, are above the level of front-line supervisors but below the level of vice-presidents
The gap can also be attributed to . . . the difficulty they have had in penetrating the so-called glass ceiling, a bias barrier that keeps so many women from moving beyond middle management.
- middle manager
- In a large organization, a manager or administrator who occupies a position in the organizational hierarchy which is above the level of a front-line supervisor but below the level of a vice-president or similar senior manager
- middle name
- a trait, activity, or action closely associated with or that excellently describes a person
Think twice about playing for cash because Poker is her middle name.
- middle name
- a name between the given name and the family name or surname
I go by David but it's my middle name; my full name is William David Mason.
- middle names
- plural form of middle name
- middle of nowhere
- Nowhere; any place lacking population, interesting things, or defining characteristics
We took a wrong turn hours ago and ended up lost in the middle of nowhere.
- middle of the road
- of a type of melodic popular music that has wide appeal
- middle of the road
- Having a centrist attitude or philosophy; not extreme, especially politically
A typical middle of the road compromise is to leave the problem as it is.
- middle order
- the batsmen who bat in positions 5 to 7; often the poorer batsmen, the wicket-keeper and the bowlers who can bat best
- middle passage
- A middle way, especially between two extremes; an intermediate path in space or time
- middle passage
- Specifically, the middle part of the sea voyage by which slaves were transported from Africa to America
The city once laid claim to the largest fleet of slave ships in the history of the trade as its merchants overtook Bristol and London in dominating the Middle Passage.
- middle school
- A school which crosses the traditional divide between primary school and secondary school
- middle schools
- plural form of middle school
- middle stump
- the stump in the middle of the batsman's wicket
- middle stumps
- plural form of middle stump
- middle voice
- The form in which the subject of a verb performs some action upon itself
middle voice: My clothes soaked in detergent overnight.
- middle voice verb
- verbs in the middle voice, they exist in a few languages like Icelandic
Icelandic: fallast.
- middle voice verbs
- plural form of middle voice verb
- middle way
- The midpoint of a person's life; middle age
- middle way
- An intermediate course (of action, policy etc) between two extremes; a compromise
Obama's choice, according to McChrystal, a former special forces commander, boils down to this: Escalate or evacuate, get on or get out; there is no middle way that does not invite calamity on a grand scale.
- middle way
- The middle of three paths
- middle youth
- A period in life where one can not be described as young, but does not consider or wish to be considered middle-aged
- middle-aged
- of, or relating to middle age; neither old nor young
- middle-class
- characteristic of the middle class(es); reflective of that class's values and aspirations. Commonly associated with a desire for social respectability and an emphasis on family values and education
- middle-class
- occupying a position between the upper class and the working class
- middle-click
- To press the middle button on a computer mouse
- middle-click
- To activate an item on the screen by middle-clicking while the pointer is over it
- middle-earth
- The physical world, as imagined between heaven and hell, or pre-Christian equivalents
- middle-finger
- Attributive form of middle finger, noun
He's got middle-finger syndrome: he can't stop flipping the bird.
- middle-of-the-road
- Alternative spelling of middle of the road
- middle-sized
- Of a medium size
- middle dot
- See: interpunct
- middle age
- the time of life between youth and old age e
- middle child
- child born between the first and the last children
- middle ages
- The Middle Ages form the middle period in a traditional schematic division of European history into three "ages": the classical civilization of Antiquity, the Middle Ages and Modern Times
- middle way
- 1. A policy or course of action which avoids extremes: there is no middle way between central planning and capitalism.2 (The Middle Way) the eightfold path of Buddhism between indulgence and asceticism
- Middle Ages
- period in European history which began after the collapse of the West Roman Empire in the 4th and 5th centuries and continued until the Renaissance in 15th century
- Middle Ages
- In European history, the Middle Ages was the period between the end of the Roman Empire in 476 AD and about 1500 AD, especially the later part of this period. The period in European history between antiquity and the Renaissance, often dated from 476 to 1453. the Middle Ages the period in European history between about 1100 and 1500 AD. Period in European history traditionally dated from the fall of the Roman Empire to the dawn of the Renaissance. In the 5th century the Western Roman Empire endured declines in population, economic vitality, and the size and prominence of cities. It also was greatly affected by a dramatic migration of peoples that began in the 3rd century. In the 5th century these peoples, often called barbarians, carved new kingdoms out of the decrepit Western Empire. Over the next several centuries these kingdoms oversaw the gradual amalgamation of barbarian, Christian, and Roman cultural and political traditions. The longest-lasting of these kingdoms, that of the Franks, laid the foundation for later European states. It also produced Charlemagne, the greatest ruler of the Middle Ages, whose reign was a model for centuries to come. The collapse of Charlemagne's empire and a fresh wave of invasions led to a restructuring of medieval society. The 11th-13th centuries mark the high point of medieval civilization. The church underwent reform that strengthened the place of the pope in church and society but led to clashes between the pope and emperor. Population growth, the flourishing of towns and farms, the emergence of merchant classes, and the development of governmental bureaucracies were part of cultural and economic revival during this period. Meanwhile, thousands of knights followed the call of the church to join the Crusades. Medieval civilization reached its apex in the 13th century with the emergence of Gothic architecture, the appearance of new religious orders, and the expansion of learning and the university. The church dominated intellectual life, producing the Scholasticism of St. Thomas Aquinas. The decline of the Middle Ages resulted from the breakdown of medieval national governments, the great papal schism, the critique of medieval theology and philosophy, and economic and population collapse brought on by famine and disease
- Middle America
- Middle America is used to refer to the area consisting of Mexico and Central America, sometimes including the West Indies. A region of southern North America comprising Mexico, Central America, and sometimes the West Indies.Middle American adj. & n
- Middle America
- Middle America is the same as the Midwest
- Middle America
- average middle-class Americans (viewed as a distinct social group); Midwest region of the United States; region comprised of the parts of North America located south of the United States
- Middle America
- Journalists use Middle America to refer to middle class people in America who are believed not to like change. People in the United States want the president to pay attention to Middle America
- Middle American
- average middle-class American
- Middle Chinese
- The Chinese language during the Sui and Tang dynasties (581-907)
- Middle Colonies
- North American colonies settled by the Dutch and the Swedes (in the area of present-day New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware)
- Middle Dutch
- The Dutch language from the middle of the 12th through the 15th century
- Middle East
- {i} region extending from the southeastern and eastern shores of the Mediterranean Sea (including countries in southwest Asia and northeast Africa)
- Middle East
- The Middle East is the area around the eastern Mediterranean that includes Iran and all the countries in Asia to the west and south-west of Iran. The two great rivers of the Middle East rise in the mountains of Turkey. the area that includes Iran and Egypt and the countries which are between them Far East Eastern. or Mideast or Near East Geographic region where Europe, Africa, and Asia meet. It is an unofficial and imprecise term that now generally encompasses the lands around the southern and eastern shores of the Mediterranean Sea notably Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Lebanon, and Syria as well as Iran, Iraq, and the countries of the Arabian Peninsula. Afghanistan, Libya, Turkey, and The Sudan are sometimes also included. The term was formerly used by Western geographers and historians to describe the region from the Persian Gulf to Southeast Asia; Near East is sometimes used to describe the same area
- Middle East Forum
- {i} United States "think tank" founded in 1990 by historian and columnist Daniel Pipes
- Middle East conflict
- political and military power struggle between countries of the Middle East
- Middle East information highway
- information highway which serves the Middle East
- Middle East peace process
- ongoing process of reaching peace between Israel Palestinians and other Arab nations
- Middle Eastern
- Middle Eastern means relating to the Middle East. Most Middle Eastern countries have extremely high rates of population growth
- Middle Eastern cooking
- style of cooking popular in the Middle East
- Middle England
- Journalists use Middle England to refer to middle class people in England who are believed not to like change. This shows that the people of Middle England no longer trust the Tories
- Middle English
- form of the English language which was used from c.1100 to c.1500 (language of Chaucer)
- Middle English
- The English language from about 1100 to 1500. Vernacular spoken and written in England 1100-1500, the descendant of Old English and the ancestor of Modern English. It can be divided into three periods: Early, Central, and Late. The Central period was marked by the borrowing of many Anglo-Norman words and the rise of the London dialect, used by such poets as John Gower and Geoffrey Chaucer in a 14th-century flowering of English literature. The dialects of Middle English are usually divided into four groups: Southern, East Midland, West Midland, and Northern
- Middle High German
- High German from the 11th through the 15th century
- Middle Iranian
- Of or relating to any of the Iranian languages, such as Pahlavi or Khotanese, spoken from about the first to the tenth century in areas of western and central Asia
- Middle Irish
- Irish from the 10th through the 13th century
- Middle Low German
- Low German from the middle of the 13th through the 15th century
- Middle Palisade
- A mountain, 4,273.7 m (14,012 ft) high, of the Sierra Nevada in east-central California
- Middle Stone Age
- {i} Mesolithic period, period following the paleolithic period and preceding the Neolithic period
- Middle Temple
- a London organization of law students and barristers and the buildings they use, which is one of the four Inns of Court
- Middle West
- The Middle West is the central part of the United States. = Midwest. another form of the Midwest
- Middle West
- part of the United States which is west of the Appalachian Mountains and East of the Rocky Mountains
- Middle realm
- A dimension of awareness after death
- Middle-earth
- {i} continent on J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional ancient earth where most of the tales of his legendarium occurred
- middle C
- The tone represented by a note on the first ledger line below a treble clef or the first ledger line above a bass clef. It is the first C below international pitch. the musical note C, which is the middle note on a piano
- middle age
- transitional age, middle point of one's life, mid-life
- middle age
- Middle age is the period in your life when you are no longer young but have not yet become old. Middle age is usually considered to take place between the ages of 40 and
- middle age
- Also called midlife. the period of your life between the ages of about 40 and 60, when you are no longer young but are not yet old
- middle age
- between 40 and 60 years of age
- middle age
- the time of life between youth and old age (e g , between 40 and 60 years of age)
- middle age
- Men tend to put on weight in middle age. The time of human life between youth and old age, usually reckoned as the years between 40 and
- middle ages
- The period of Western history from the fall of the Roman empire (476 A D ) until the fall of Constantinople to the Turks (1453 A D ) Also known as the Medieval Period and the "Dark Ages " The Middle Ages were characterized by feudalism (rule by independent war-lords and a subjected peasantry) and the dominance of the Catholic Church Preceded by Antiquity and followed by the Renaissance
- middle ages
- Time period between ancient GRECO-ROMAN history and modern history Establish by chronologist during the Renaissance as having the value of about a thousand years, the true annual value of the MIDDLE AGES is much less than a thousand years in length
- middle ages
- The thousand years before the Renaissance Encompassing the "Dark Ages" in the Early Middle Ages, and the "Gothic" period and the "Age of Chivalry"
- middle ages
- The period roughly from the fifth to the fifteenth centuries A D , that is, from the fall of Rome in 476 A D to the fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1453, the invention of the printing press by Johann Gutenberg (1400?-?1468) and the discovery of America in 1492 by Christopher Columbus (1451-1506) During most of this period the leaders of the Roman Church considered the taking of interest (usury) unjust This period, particularly the earlier part of it, is also known as the Dark Ages because of its intellectual and economic stagnation
- middle ages
- the period in European history between classical antiquity and the Renaissance, usually regarded as extending from the downfall of Rome, in 476, to about 1450-1500
- middle ages
- period of European history that follows antiquity, conventionally regarded as beginning with the fall of Rome to Odoacer in 476 and ending (in Germany) with the death of Holy Roman Emperor Maximillian I in 1519 The use of a single label for this entire thousand-year period conceals a great deal of chronological change and regional variation, yet certain generalizations do apply to the entire period, which is set apart from antiquity and from the modern era by, among other things, the generally unquestioned belief in transcendence (specifically in the Christian religion), the total dominance of the Christian Church (specifically the Roman Catholic) over spiritual and intellectual life, the limited literacy of the laity, the textuality of the culture, the reliance on authority, rather than observation, experience, or human reason as a truth-source, and the emergence and development of the feudal system
- middle ages
- Generally the period of time from Augustine to Gutenberg (350-1450)
- middle ages
- European historical period between roughly A D 500 and 1450
- middle ages
- the period of history between classical antiquity and the Italian Renaissance
- middle ages
- The period in European history between antiquity and the Renaissance, often dated from A D 476 to 1453
- middle atlantic
- of a region of the United States generally including Delaware; Maryland; Virginia; and usually New York; Pennsylvania; New Jersey; "mid-Atlantic states
- middle c
- 63 Hertz
- middle c
- the note designated by the first ledger line below the treble staff; 261
- middle cerebral artery
- one of two branches of the internal carotid artery; divides into three branches
- middle cerebral vein
- either of two cerebral veins
- middle class
- {i} intermediary social rank between the rich and the poor; population that has a socio-economic status between that of the working class and the upper class
- middle class
- The middle class or middle classes are the people in a society who are not working class or upper class. Business people, managers, doctors, lawyers, and teachers are usually regarded as middle class. the expansion of the middle class in the late 19th century The President may have secured some support from the middle classes. Middle class is also an adjective. He is rapidly losing the support of blue-collar voters and of middle-class conservatives. the social class that includes people who are educated and work in professional jobs, for example teachers or managers lower class, upper class upper class, working class working class
- middle class
- the social class between the lower and upper classes
- middle course
- golden path, best way, proper course
- middle deck
- platform of a ship that is located in the middle
- middle distance
- A middle-distance runner is someone who takes part in races of medium length, for example 800 metres. the part of a picture or view that is between the nearest part and the part that is furthest away
- middle distance
- If you are looking into the middle distance, you are looking at a place that is neither near nor far away. He stares detachedly into the middle distance, towards nothing in particular
- middle distance
- the part of a scene between the foreground and the background
- middle ear
- the main cavity of the ear; between the eardrum and the inner ear
- middle ear
- The space between the eardrum and the inner ear that contains the three auditory ossicles, which convey vibrations through the oval window to the cochlea. Also called tympanum. the part just inside your ear
- middle east
- Law and practice in the countries of the Middle East
- middle east
- large region that covers parts of northern Africa, southwestern Asia, and southeastern Europe consisting of Bahrain, Cyprus, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, and Yemen
- middle east
- the area around the eastern Mediterranean; from Turkey to northern Africa and eastward to Iran; the site of such ancient civilizations as Phoenicia and Babylon and Egypt and the birthplace of Judaism and Christianity and Islam; had continuous economic and political turmoil in the 20th century; "the Middle East is the cradle of Western civilization
- middle east
- "Formerly the countries from Iran to Burma: now generally used of an area including the Arabic-speaking countries around the eastern end of the Mediterranean Sea and in the Arabian Peninsula, along with Greece, Cyprus, Iran and the greater part of N Africa " (Chambers 20th Century Dictionary, 1983 edition) See also Near East, Far East
- middle east
- Rijadh: Wed, 12-Mar-2003 08: 24 AMBagdad: Wed, 12-Mar-2003 08: 24 AMJerusalem: Wed, 12-Mar-2003 07: 24 AMCairo: Wed, 12-Mar-2003 07: 24 AMIstanbul: Wed, 12-Mar-2003 07: 24 AM
- middle east
- Rijadh: Wed, 12-Mar-2003 22: 50 PMBagdad: Wed, 12-Mar-2003 22: 50 PMJerusalem: Wed, 12-Mar-2003 21: 50 PMCairo: Wed, 12-Mar-2003 21: 50 PMIstanbul: Wed, 12-Mar-2003 21: 50 PM
- middle east
- Generally the political region comprised of the countries bordering the eastern edge of the Mediterranean Sea Egypt and Israel, along with Lebanon, Syria and Jordan make up this volatile region of diverse religions and cultures A number of UN peacekeeping forces have been stationed in the region dating back to the first Arab-Israeli War in 1948
- middle eastern
- of or relating to or located in the Middle East
- middle english
- English from about 1100 to 1450
- middle english
- The version of English spoken after the Norman Conquest from 1066 up to about 1450 or so Before the Norman Conquest, the common version of English was Old English or Anglo-Saxon, a Germanic language that is difficult to read without specialized training An influx of Norman French and Latin vocabulary after the Normans conquered England resulted in rapid changes in spoken English Between 1400-1450, a phenomenon known as the Great Vowel Shift occurred, and the pronunciation of vowels changed in English, resulting in Modern English (See below) To avoid irritating your teacher, do not confuse Old English, Middle English, and Modern English
- middle english
- was spoken in England from around 1100 to 1500 (late Middle Ages)
- middle english
- Historical variety of English spoken, written, and sung in England from 1100-1500 Major changes from OE are reduction of inflections and large borrowings in the lexicon from French and Latin
- middle finger
- the second finger; between the index finger and the ring finger
- middle finger
- the longest finger on your hand
- middle finger
- third finger of the hand
- middle ground
- The part of an artwork that lies between the foreground (nearest to the viewer) and the background
- middle ground
- Area of a two-dimensional work of art between foreground and background
- middle ground
- Within the depicted space of an artwork, the area that takes up the middle distance of the image See also foreground, background
- middle ground
- - The part of a picture or a view depicted as the middle to the viewer
- middle ground
- The area that appears between the foreground and background
- middle ground
- ideas that are not extreme, and that people who oppose each other can agree about
- middle ground
- The middle area in a painting
- middle high german
- High German from 1100 to 1500
- middle irish
- Irish Gaelic from 1100 to 1500
- middle lamella
- The pectin-rich intercellular material cementing together the primary walls of adjacent plant cells
- middle low german
- Low German from 1100 to 1500
- middle management
- Middle management refers to managers who are below the top level of management, and who are responsible for controlling and running an organization rather than making decisions about how it operates. The proportion of women in middle management has risen to 40%. middle-management jobs. The middle tier of management, usually including lower executives and employees who manage supervisors overseeing day-to-day operations. middle manager n. managers who are in charge of small groups of people, but do not take important decisions that affect the whole organization manager
- middle management
- A level of supervisory employees who implement the decisions of top management