mediate
/ˈmiːdieɪt/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈmiːdieɪt/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈmē-dē-ət/ (ame, mw)
mediate — 動詞
- mediatepresent simple I / you / we / they
- mediateshe / she / it
- mediatedpast simple
- mediating-ing form
1. To speak with both sides of a disagreement and help them find a way to settle it
調解;調停
居間協調以化解爭端
To speak with both sides of a disagreement and help them find a way to settle it, without taking sides yourself.
Jiwoo mediated between the two departments over the budget disagreement.
Jiwoo 在兩個部門之間調解預算爭議。
mediate + between + groups in disagreement
The United Nations sent a team to mediate the border conflict.
聯合國派遣了一支團隊去調解邊境衝突。
mediate + noun phrase (dispute/conflict)
A neutral third party can help mediate disputes in the workplace.
中立的第三方可以協助調解職場糾紛。
After weeks of silence, Linh agreed to mediate between her former friends.
沉默了幾週後,Linh 同意在她昔日好友之間進行調解。
The lawyer was asked to mediate a fair settlement for both sides.
那位律師受委託為雙方調解出一個公平的方案。
- arbitrate
More formal than 'mediate'; often implies the third party makes a binding decision.
- conciliate
Focuses on calming hostility and winning trust, not necessarily reaching a formal agreement.
- negotiate
The parties negotiate directly; a mediator is a neutral third party who helps them negotiate.
- moderate
Refers to running a discussion or debate fairly; less about resolving deep disagreement.
文法句型
mediate + noun phrase (dispute/conflict/negotiation)
mediate + between + [people or groups]
mediate + object + for + [person]
用法筆記
When the focus is on the people or groups rather than the issue, use 'mediate between' (intransitive). The direct object is most often a type of disagreement — a dispute, conflict, or negotiation — not the people themselves, though 'mediate the parties' is occasionally found in formal legal writing.
常見錯誤
2. To act as an invisible middle step or mechanism that influences how something ha
傳導;中介
透過中介機制影響或傳遞
To act as an invisible middle step or mechanism that influences how something happens, is understood, or is passed on — for example, how social media shapes what news people see, or how a chemical in the body controls a reaction.
Social media platforms mediate how people receive breaking news.
社群媒體平台影響了人們接收即時新聞的方式。
mediate + wh-clause (how)
In many societies, cultural norms mediate the way communities respond to rapid change.
在許多社會中,文化規範形塑了社群因應快速變遷的方式。
The teacher's feedback mediated the students' understanding of the novel's themes.
老師的回饋引導了學生對小說主題的理解。
Hormones mediate the body's response to long-term stress by regulating key systems.
荷爾蒙透過調節關鍵系統,來影響身體對長期壓力的反應。
- convey
More general; focuses on carrying something from one place or person to another.
- transmit
Often implies a technical or electronic process; stronger sense of one-directional flow.
- channel
Suggests directing something through a specific route or medium.
- facilitate
Broader; means to make something easier without necessarily being the mechanism itself.
文法句型
mediate + noun phrase (experience/response/understanding)
mediate + wh-clause
mediate + noun phrase + through/with + [mechanism]
用法筆記
The subject of this sense is usually an abstract or institutional agent (a process, platform, system, or mechanism) rather than a person. Common in academic, technical, and social-science writing. The object is an experience, response, or process — not a concrete thing.
常見錯誤
mediate — 形容詞
- mediatepositive
- more mediatecomparative
- most mediatesuperlative
1. Located in the space between two other things; occupying a middle point in a ser
中間的
位於兩個事物之間的位置
Located in the space between two other things; occupying a middle point in a series, structure, or system.
The embryos were examined at the mediate stage of their early development.
研究人員在胚胎早期發育的中間階段進行了觀察。
mediate + stage (developmental sequence)
Joon holds a mediate position in the company hierarchy, between the junior staff and senior executives.
Joon 在公司層級中處於中間職位,介於基層員工和高階主管之間。
Élise described the mediate step in the experiment that connects the initial and final measurements.
Élise 描述了實驗中連接初始階段與最終測量的中間步驟。
Students are tested at the mediate level of the course before advancing to the final module.
學生在課程的中間級別接受測驗,然後才能進入最後一個單元。
- intermediate
Much more common in everyday English; can replace 'mediate' in almost any context.
- middle
Simpler and less formal; suitable for general descriptions of position.
- intervening
Emphasises that the position comes between two others in time or space.
文法句型
mediate + noun (stage/position/step/level)
用法筆記
Primarily used in technical or formal descriptions of position within a sequence or structure (developmental stages, hierarchies, experimental steps). 'Intermediate' is far more common in everyday English for the same meaning.
常見錯誤
2. Happening through an intermediate step, person, or mechanism instead of directly
間接的
透過中介而非直接作用的
Happening through an intermediate step, person, or mechanism instead of directly; not immediate or face-to-face.
The study examined the mediate effects of exercise on mood through brain chemistry.
該研究透過腦部化學機制探討了運動對情緒的間接影響。
mediate effects / mediate causes
Language acts as a mediating tool through which children develop reasoning skills.
語言是一種中介工具,兒童透過它來發展推理能力。
The investigation focused on mediate causes rather than the immediate trigger of the fire.
調查聚焦於間接原因,而非起火事件的直接觸發因素。
In the company structure, managers play a mediate role between executives and staff.
在公司架構中,經理人在高層與基層員工之間扮演間接角色。
文法句型
mediate + noun (effect/cause/relation/role)
用法筆記
Used attributively (before a noun). Much more formal than 'indirect.' Common in academic writing about causation, communication networks, and organisational structure. The contrast with 'immediate' or 'direct' is often explicitly stated in the same sentence.