Mediate in a sentence as a verb

It's as or more reasonable to say that governments evolved out of the need to mediate conflicts between people living in groups.

Today, we're getting to the point where radios can mediate spectrum usage issues amongst themselves.

Where you must pay a member of the protection racket to mediate publishing knowledge of someone else's extreme wrongdoing?That is terrible advice.

Previously the scientific journal would mediate the relationship between the scientist and his/her audience.

Photons are spin one, and mediate the electromagnetic interaction.

Mediate in a sentence as an adjective

You depend on subsidized legal infrastructure to mediate your interactions with other businesses and customers.

This is also a more reasonable explanation for organized crime, seeing as how criminals cannot rely on the government to mediate criminal disputes.

Struggle for impartiality when attempting to mediate disputes, and be guided by your wisdom and your sense of justice rather than by laws, rules, or precedents, which offer poor guidance in changing times.

Government also enjoys the acceptance by society that it is the only actor with certain authorities, like the authority to mediate conflict with violence, imprison and execute people, break up companies or prevent mergers by force, and fund itself via taxation.

Where you must pay a member of the protection racket to mediate publishing knowledge of someone else's extreme wrongdoing?Might be useful to distinguish between the ideal and the actual: in an ideal world, you of course shouldn't need a lawyer and the manufacturers should smilingly thank anyone who discovers an exploit and tells them.

Mediate definitions

verb

act between parties with a view to reconciling differences; "He interceded in the family dispute"; "He mediated a settlement"

See also: intercede intermediate liaise arbitrate

verb

occupy an intermediate or middle position or form a connecting link or stage between two others; "mediate between the old and the new"

adjective

acting through or dependent on an intervening agency; "the disease spread by mediate as well as direct contact"

adjective

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"

See also: in-between middle