middle
English
Alternative forms
- myddle (obsolete)
Etymology
From Middle English middel, from Old English middel, middle (“middle, centre, waist”), from Proto-Germanic *midlą, *midilą, *medalą (“middle”), a diminutive of Proto-Germanic *midjō (“middle, midst”) (compare *midjaz (“mid, middle”, adjective)), from Proto-Indo-European *médʰyos (“between, in the middle, middle”). Cognate with West Frisian middel, Dutch middel, German mittel (“middle”, adjective), German Mittel (“middle, means”, noun), Danish middel (“means, agent, medicine; middle/medium”). Related also to Swedish medel (“means, medium”), Icelandic meðal (“means, medicine”). See also mid.
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈmɪdəl/, [ˈmɪ.ɾɫ̩]
Audio (US) (file) - (UK) IPA(key): /ˈmɪdəl/, [ˈmɪ.dəɫ], [ˈmɪ.dʊ]
- (General Australian) IPA(key): /ˈmɪdəl/, [ˈmɪ̝.dəɫ], [ˈmɪ̝.dʊ], [ˈmɪ̝.ɾ-]
Audio (AU) (file) - (New Zealand) IPA(key): /ˈmɘdɘl/, [ˈmə.dɯ(ɫ)], [ˈmə.ɾ-]
- Rhymes: -ɪdəl
Noun
middle (plural middles)
- 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.
- I woke up in the middle of the night.
- In the middle of the marathon, David collapsed from fatigue.
- 1913, Joseph C[rosby] Lincoln, chapter I, in Mr. Pratt’s Patients, New York, N.Y., London: D[aniel] Appleton and Company, →OCLC:
- Then there came a reg'lar terror of a sou'wester same as you don't get one summer in a thousand, and blowed the shanty flat and ripped about half of the weir poles out of the sand. We spent consider'ble money getting 'em reset, and then a swordfish got into the pound and tore the nets all to slathers, right in the middle of the squiteague season.
- (cricket) The middle stump.
- The central part of a human body; the waist.
- 2012, Caroline Moore, Fasting In A Fast World:
- If I have a diet plan and stick to it, it is easy for me to have control over my middle.
- (grammar) The middle voice.
- (politics) the center of the political spectrum.
- As part of his successful re-election strategy, Clinton began governing from the middle.
Synonyms
Translations
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Adjective
middle (not comparable)
- Located in the middle; in between.
- the middle point
- middle name, Middle English, Middle Ages
- Central.
- (grammar) Pertaining to the middle voice.
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:intermediate
Derived terms
- Middle Armenian
- Middle Assamese
- Middle Bengali
- Middle Breton
- Middle Chinese
- Middle Cornish
- Middle Danish
- Middle Dutch
- Middle Egyptian, Late—, Neo—
- Middle English
- Middle French
- Middle Frisian
- Middle Greek
- Middle High / Low German
- Middle Indo-Aryan
- Middle Iranian
- Middle Irish
- Middle Japanese
- Middle Korean
- Middle Latin
- Middle Mongol
- Middle Mongolian
- Middle Norwegian
- Middle Ottoman
- Middle Persian
- Middle Polish
- Middle Saxon
- Middle Scots
- Middle Welsh
- diddle for middle
- down the middle
- in the middle of
- knock someone into the middle of next week
- law of (the) excluded middle
- man in the middle
- monkey in the middle
- piggy (pig) in the middle
- play (work) both sides (ends) against the middle
- take one's half out of the middle
- thick around the middle
- work both ends against the middle
- man-in-the-middle attack
- middle age, middle-aged
- Middle Ages
- middle article
- middle atmosphere
- middle body
- middleborn
- middlebox
- middlebreaker
- middlebrow
- middlebuster
- middle C
- Middle Cambrian
- middle child
- middle childhood
- middle class, middle-class, lower—, upper—
- middle-click
- middle college
- middle day
- middle distance, middle-distance
- middle dot
- middle eight
- middle-end
- middle for diddle
- middlegame (middle game)
- middle ground
- middle-grounder
- middle guard
- middle hundreds
- middle income trap
- middle-income trap
- middle infield, —er
- middle latitude
- middle manager, — management
- middleman (middle man), middlewoman, middleperson
- middle marker
- middle-market
- middle mile
- middle name
- middle note
- middle of bumfuck nowhere
- middle of nowhere
- middle of the market
- middle of the road, —er
- middle-of-the-roadism
- middle order
- middle pair
- middle passage (Middle Passage)
- middle path
- middle position
- middle power
- middle reaches
- middle-road
- middle-roader
- middle school, -er, — student
- middle-sized
- middle splitter
- middle spotted woodpecker
- middlestream
- middle stump
- middle term
- middle tilde
- middle verb
- middle voice
- middle watch
- Middle Watut
- middle way
- middleweight
- middle youth
- principle of excluded middle
Translations
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Verb
middle (third-person singular simple present middles, present participle middling, simple past and past participle middled)
- (obsolete) To take a middle view of. [17th–18th c.]
- 1748, [Samuel Richardson], “Letter XXVII”, in Clarissa. Or, The History of a Young Lady: […], volumes (please specify |volume=I to VII), London: […] S[amuel] Richardson; […], →OCLC:
- And now, to middle the matter between both, it is pity, that the man they favour has not that sort of merit which a person of a mind so delicate as that of Miss Harlowe might reasonably expect in a husband.
- (obsolete, nautical, transitive) To double (a rope) into two equal portions; to fold in the middle. [19th c.]