Middle vs. Midway — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Middle and Midway
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Compare with Definitions
Middle
Equally distant from extremes or limits; central
The middle point on a line.
Midway
The area of a fair, carnival, circus, or exposition where sideshows and other amusements are located.
Middle
Being at neither one extreme nor the other, as of a sequence or scale; intermediate
The middle decades of the century.
Midway
The middle of a way or distance.
Middle
Of or relating to a division of geologic time between an earlier and a later division
The Middle Paleozoic.
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Midway
A middle course of action or thought.
Middle
Of or relating to a stage in the development of a language or literature between earlier and later stages
Middle Swedish.
Midway
In the middle of a way or distance; halfway
Midway through the second quarter of the football game.
Middle
(Grammar) Of, relating to, or being a verb form or voice in which the subject both performs and is affected by the action specified.
Midway
The middle; the midst.
Middle
An area or a point equidistant between extremes; a center
The middle of a circle.
Midway
A middle way or manner; a mean or middle course between extremes.
Middle
Something intermediate between extremes
The middle of the story.
Midway
(US) The part of a fair or circus where rides, entertainments, and booths are concentrated.
Middle
The middle part of the human body; the waist.
Midway
(US) The widest aisle in the middle of an industrial complex (such as railroad shops or a coach yard) along which various buildings are aligned
Middle
(Logic) A middle term.
Midway
Being in the middle of the way or distance; middle.
Middle
The middle voice.
Midway
Halfway; equidistant from either end point; in the middle between two points
Middle
A verb form in the middle voice.
Midway
The middle of the way or distance; a middle way or course.
Paths indirect, or in the midway faint.
Middle
To place in the middle.
Midway
Being in the middle of the way or distance; as, the midway air.
Middle
(Nautical) To fold in the middle
Middle the sail.
Midway
In the middle of the way or distance; half way.
Middle
A centre, midpoint.
The middle of a circle is the point which has the same distance to every point of circle.
Midway
The place at a fair or carnival where sideshows and similar amusements are located
Middle
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.
Midway
Naval battle of World War II (June 1942); land and carrier-based American planes decisively defeated a Japanese fleet on its way to invade the Midway Islands
Middle
(cricket) The middle stump.
Midway
Equally distant from the extremes
Middle
The central part of a human body; the waist.
Midway
At half the distance; at the middle;
He was halfway down the ladder when he fell
Middle
(grammar) The middle voice.
Middle
Located in the middle; in between.
The middle point
Middle name, Middle English, Middle Ages
Middle
Central.
Middle
(grammar) Pertaining to the middle voice.
Middle
(obsolete) To take a middle view of.
Middle
To double (a rope) into two equal portions; to fold in the middle.
Middle
Equally distant from the extreme either of a number of things or of one thing; mean; medial; as, the middle house in a row; a middle rank or station in life; flowers of middle summer; men of middle age.
Middle
Intermediate; intervening.
Will, seeking good, finds many middle ends.
The middle-class electorate of Great Britain.
Middle
The point or part equally distant from the extremities or exterior limits, as of a line, a surface, or a solid; an intervening point or part in space, time, or order of series; the midst; central portion
In this, as in most questions of state, there is a middle.
Middle
An area that is approximately central within some larger region;
It is in the center of town
They ran forward into the heart of the struggle
They were in the eye of the storm
Middle
An intermediate part or section;
A whole is that which has beginning, middle, and end
We have given it at the end of the section since it involves the calculus
Start at the beginning and go on until you come to the end
Middle
The middle area of the human torso (usually in front);
Young American women believe that a bare midriff is fashionable
Middle
Time between the beginning and the end of a temporal period;
The middle of the war
Rain during the middle of April
The end of the year
The ending of warranty period
Middle
Put in the middle
Middle
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
Middle
Equally distant from the extremes
Middle
Of a stage in the development of a language or literature between earlier and later stages;
Middle English is the English language from about 1100 to 1500
Middle Gaelic
Late Greek
Middle
Between an earlier and a later period of time;
In the middle years
In his middle thirties
Late evening
Late 18th century
A late movie
Took a late flight
Had a late breakfast
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