B2 adjective #15,000 よく出る 3分で読める

mediate

Mediate describes something that happens through an intermediary rather than directly.

Explanation at your level:

This word is very hard for beginners. Think of it like this: If I give you a gift, that is direct. If I give the gift to your friend to give to you, that is mediate. It means there is someone in the middle.

When we say something is mediate, we mean it is not direct. Imagine you are talking to a friend through a wall. You are not talking directly. Your voice is mediate because it goes through the wall first.

In B1 English, we use mediate to describe things that happen through a tool or another person. If you learn English through a book, your learning is mediate. The book is the 'middle' step between you and the language.

At this level, you'll see mediate in academic texts. It describes causes or relationships that aren't immediate. For instance, a mediate cause is one that leads to an effect through a series of other events, rather than right away.

Advanced learners use mediate to distinguish between direct and indirect experiences. It is common in philosophy or psychology. For example, 'Our knowledge of the world is often mediate, filtered through our own biases and cultural background.' It adds a layer of precision to your analysis.

At the mastery level, mediate functions as a technical term. It implies a complex structure of causality or perception. It is often contrasted with 'immediate' to highlight the presence of a medium—be it a language, a technology, or a social construct—that shapes our interaction with reality. It is a precise, scholarly tool for nuanced writing.

30秒でわかる単語

  • Adjective meaning indirect.
  • Used in academic contexts.
  • Opposite of immediate.
  • Shares root with middle.

Hey there! Let's talk about the word mediate. While you might know the verb 'to mediate' (like a referee settling a fight), the adjective form is a bit more specialized. When we say something is mediate, we mean it isn't happening directly.

Think of it as the 'middleman' of concepts. If you look at the sun directly, that's immediate. If you look at the sun through a mirror or a lens, your experience is mediate because the light had to bounce off something else first. It’s all about that extra step in the middle!

The word mediate comes from the Latin word mediatus, which is the past participle of mediare, meaning 'to be in the middle.' This roots back to the Latin medius, which simply means 'middle.'

It’s fascinating how this word shares a family tree with words like medium, median, and even midway. Historically, it was used in philosophy and theology to describe how humans might relate to the divine through an intermediary. Over centuries, it evolved into a way to describe any process that requires a bridge to connect two things.

You will mostly encounter mediate in academic, scientific, or philosophical writing. It’s not a word you’d typically use when ordering a coffee! It is often used in phrases like mediate cause or mediate perception.

Because it sounds quite formal, using it in casual conversation might make you sound a bit like a professor. Stick to using it when you want to highlight that a process isn't direct. For example, in psychology, we talk about mediate learning, which is learning that happens through a teacher or tool rather than just by doing.

While 'mediate' itself isn't the star of many common idioms, it is related to the concept of the 'middle man.' Here are five ways we express this idea:

  • Middle man: A person who acts as an intermediary.
  • Through the grapevine: Receiving information indirectly.
  • Second-hand: Getting info from a source that isn't the original.
  • Go-between: Someone who carries messages between two parties.
  • Proxy: Using someone or something to act on your behalf.

The adjective mediate is pronounced MEE-dee-it. Note that the stress is on the first syllable. It is rarely used in the plural because it describes a quality of a relationship or cause, rather than a countable object.

Rhyming words include radiate (though the stress differs), deviate, and initiate. When using it in a sentence, it often follows a linking verb like 'is' or 'appears.' You wouldn't typically say 'a mediate apple'; you would say 'the mediate effect of the medicine.' It is a formal adjective that requires a specific context to sound natural.

Fun Fact

It comes from the same root as 'mid' and 'middle'!

Pronunciation Guide

UK ˈmiːdieɪt

Sounds like 'mee-dee-it'

US ˈmiːdieɪt

Sounds like 'mee-dee-it'

Common Errors

  • Stress on the wrong syllable
  • Pronouncing the 'ate' like the verb
  • Confusing with median

Rhymes With

deviate initiate radiate expiate abbreviate

Difficulty Rating

読解 4/5

Academic

Writing 4/5

Formal

Speaking 3/5

Rarely used

リスニング 3/5

Formal

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

direct middle indirect

Learn Next

intermediary causality perception

上級

mediation mediator

Grammar to Know

Adjective usage

The mediate effect.

Formal register

Using mediate in essays.

Word roots

Latin roots.

Examples by Level

1

The ball is not direct.

direct = straight

simple adjective

2

The path is long.

3

I use a pen.

4

The cat is here.

5

The sun is hot.

6

The door is open.

7

The book is new.

8

The car is red.

1

The message was mediate.

2

He used a helper.

3

It was not a direct hit.

4

The light was filtered.

5

The sound was soft.

6

She used a tool.

7

The path was indirect.

8

It took a long time.

1

The teacher acted as a mediate source.

2

His knowledge was mediate.

3

The effect was mediate.

4

We saw a mediate cause.

5

The process is mediate.

6

She used a mediate approach.

7

The result was not immediate.

8

It was a mediate step.

1

The mediate influence of the media is huge.

2

We studied the mediate causes of the war.

3

His experience was mediate, not direct.

4

The mediate connection was clear.

5

They used a mediate form of communication.

6

The mediate data was analyzed.

7

It was a mediate observation.

8

The mediate impact was small.

1

The mediate nature of our perception is debated.

2

He argued for a mediate solution.

3

The mediate role of the government is vital.

4

This is a mediate consequence of the policy.

5

We must consider the mediate effects.

6

The mediate link was established.

7

It was a mediate, not primary, cause.

8

The mediate influence is often overlooked.

1

The mediate reality of digital life is complex.

2

He explored the mediate relationship between art and society.

3

The mediate structure of the argument was flawed.

4

This is a mediate representation of the truth.

5

The mediate impact of the law was felt later.

6

Her work reflects a mediate understanding of history.

7

The mediate causality is difficult to trace.

8

We analyzed the mediate factors involved.

類義語

indirect intervening intermediary secondary dependent

よく使う組み合わせ

mediate cause
mediate effect
mediate influence
mediate role
mediate experience
mediate connection
mediate factor
mediate step
mediate relationship
mediate perception

Idioms & Expressions

"middle man"

an intermediary

He cut out the middle man.

casual

"go-between"

someone who carries messages

She acted as a go-between.

neutral

"at one remove"

indirectly

I heard it at one remove.

formal

"second-hand"

not from the original source

This is second-hand information.

casual

"by proxy"

acting through another

He ruled by proxy.

formal

"through the grapevine"

indirectly via rumors

I heard it through the grapevine.

casual

Easily Confused

mediate vs immediate

Opposite meaning

Immediate is direct; mediate is not.

The immediate effect vs. the mediate effect.

mediate vs median

Similar sound

Median is a math term.

The median value vs. the mediate cause.

mediate vs medium

Shared root

Medium is the tool; mediate is the quality.

The medium of art vs. a mediate process.

mediate vs intermediate

Similar structure

Intermediate is between two points.

An intermediate step.

Sentence Patterns

B1

Subject + is + mediate

The influence is mediate.

B2

Adjective + noun

A mediate cause.

C1

Subject + acts in a mediate way

He acts in a mediate way.

C2

The mediate effect of X on Y

The mediate effect of sun on skin.

C2

It is a mediate rather than immediate result

It is a mediate rather than immediate result.

語族

Nouns

mediation the act of mediating

Verbs

mediate to settle a dispute

Adjectives

mediate indirect

関連

medium the channel used

How to Use It

frequency

3

Formality Scale

Academic Formal Neutral Casual

よくある間違い

Confusing with 'mediate' (verb) Check context
The verb means to settle a dispute; the adjective means indirect.
Using as a synonym for 'medium' Use 'medium' for the tool
Medium is the tool; mediate is the quality of being indirect.
Overusing in casual speech Use 'indirect'
Mediate sounds too academic for daily talk.
Mispronouncing as 'me-dee-ate' MEE-dee-it
The adjective ending is unstressed.
Assuming it means 'average' Use 'median'
Median is for math averages; mediate is for indirectness.

Tips

💡

Memory Palace

Imagine a bridge between two buildings; that bridge is 'mediate'.

💡

When to use

Use it to sound precise in academic essays.

🌍

Cultural insight

It reflects a Western focus on directness vs. indirectness.

💡

Grammar Shortcut

It is an adjective, so it describes a noun.

💡

Say It Right

The 'ate' is soft, like 'it'.

💡

Don't confuse

Don't mix it up with the verb 'mediate'.

💡

Did You Know?

It shares a root with 'middle'.

💡

Study Smart

Group it with 'immediate' and 'intermediate'.

💡

Writing Tip

Use it to explain complex causality.

💡

Speaking Tip

Avoid in casual talk; use 'indirect' instead.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

Mediate = Middle-ate (The middle part of the journey)

Visual Association

A bridge connecting two islands.

Word Web

Middle Bridge Indirect Intermediary

チャレンジ

Try to describe a task you do using a tool as a 'mediate' experience.

語源

Latin

Original meaning: in the middle

文化的な背景

None.

Used primarily in academic, legal, or philosophical contexts.

Used in many philosophical treatises on perception.

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

Academic Research

  • mediate cause
  • mediate influence
  • mediate factor

Philosophy

  • mediate perception
  • mediate knowledge
  • mediate experience

Law

  • mediate evidence
  • mediate impact
  • mediate responsibility

Psychology

  • mediate learning
  • mediate variable
  • mediate process

Conversation Starters

"How do you define a mediate experience?"

"Can you think of a mediate cause for a recent event?"

"Why do we prefer immediate over mediate results?"

"Is all our knowledge mediate?"

"How does technology make our lives more mediate?"

Journal Prompts

Write about a time you learned something through a mediate source.

Describe the difference between a direct and a mediate cause of a problem.

How does your phone act as a mediate tool in your life?

Reflect on how your perception of reality might be mediate.

よくある質問

8 問

Yes, it is a verb (to settle a dispute) and an adjective (indirect).

MEE-dee-it.

Usually, we use 'intermediary' for people.

No, median is for math/statistics.

No, it is quite formal.

Immediate.

Only if the email is formal or academic.

No, it is an adjective.

自分をテスト

fill blank A1

The message was not direct, it was ___.

正解! おしい! 正解: mediate

Mediate means not direct.

multiple choice A2

Which means indirect?

正解! おしい! 正解: mediate

Mediate is the synonym for indirect.

true false B1

Mediate means the same as immediate.

正解! おしい! 正解: 間違い

They are opposites.

match pairs B1

Word

意味

All matched!

Matching opposites.

sentence order B2

下の単語をタップして文を組み立てよう
正解! おしい! 正解:

Subject-verb-adjective structure.

fill blank C1

Our ___ of reality is often filtered.

正解! おしい! 正解: perception

Needs a noun.

multiple choice C2

What is a mediate cause?

正解! おしい! 正解: A distant cause

Mediate implies distance or steps.

true false B2

Mediate is a common word in casual chat.

正解! おしい! 正解: 間違い

It is formal.

match pairs C1

Word

意味

All matched!

Synonym check.

sentence order C2

下の単語をタップして文を組み立てよう
正解! おしい! 正解:

Standard adjective-noun order.

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