![]() ![]() S1 W2 adjective 1 MIDDLE centre nearest the centre and furthest from the edge, top, end etc driving in the middle lane of the motorway the middle drawer of the filing cabinet 2 TIME/AT A PARTICULAR TIME time/event half of the way through an event or period of time They spent the middle part of their vacation in Florida.The state built 10 prisons from the opening of San Quentin in 1852 until the middle of the last decade.Gary rowed out towards the middle of the lake."Did you enjoy the movie?" "It was OK but I got a little bored towards the middle.".Going through the middle of Tokyo in the rush hour can be a nightmare.The office block was in the middle of a hellish whirlwind.I had a spell in the middle of the season when I was useless.Somewhere in the middle lies the case for change. ![]() The group also is in the middle of a $ 45,000 project to renovate a pagoda in the ancient quarter.Time spent in taking stock is time well spent, even in the middle of a hectic day.It was very hard work and during the middle we had a water fight.But by the middle of the night, the alcohol will be metabolized and the rebound effect will set in.5 → be in the middle of (doing) something 6 → in the middle of something 7 → in the middle of nowhere 8 → divide/split something down the middle → piggy in the middle Examples from the Corpus middle S1 W2 noun 1 → the middle 2 → the middle 3 → the middle 4 body the part of your body around your waist and stomach somebody’s middle He was holding a towel around his middle. ![]() From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English middle mid‧dle 1 / ˈmɪdl / ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |