a person who, or a thing that, acts as a mediator, medium, or means
2. anatomy
a small bone situated between the ulnare and the radiale
intermedia in American English
(ˌintərˈmidiə)
adjective
using or involving several media, as dance, slides, electronic music, film, and painting, simultaneously; multimedia
Word origin
[1965–70; inter- + media]This word is first recorded in the period 1965–70. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: Coriolis effect, Finlandization, T cell, genetic engineering, hired guninter- is a prefix occurring in loanwords from Latin, where it meant “between,” “among,”“in the midst of,” “mutually,” “reciprocally,” “together,” “during” (intercept; interest). On this model, inter- is used in the formation of compound words (intercom; interdepartmental)