mediate
me·di·ate (mēʹdē-āt')v. me·di·at·ed, me·di·at·ing, me·di·atesv. tr. 1. To resolve or settle (differences) by working with all the conflicting parties: mediate a labor-management dispute. 2. To bring about (a settlement, for example) by working with all the conflicting parties. 3. To effect or convey as an intermediate agent or mechanism.v. intr. 1. To intervene between two or more disputants in order to bring about an agreement, a settlement, or a compromise. 2. To settle or reconcile differences. 3. To have a relation to two differing persons or things.adj. (-ĭt) 1. Acting through, involving, or dependent on an intervening agency. 2. Being in a middle position. [Late Latin mediāre, mediāt-, to be in the middle, from Latin medius, middle. See medhyo- in Indo-European Roots.] meʹdi·ate·ly (-ĭt-lē) adv.
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