- Come between - Place between - To place between; as, to interpose a screen between
the eye and the light. - To thrust; to intrude; to between, either for aid or
for troubling. - To introduce or inject between the parts of a
conversation or argument. - To be or come between. - To step in between parties at variance; to mediate;
as, the prince interposed and made peace.
- Step in - Step in when internee gets upset around five - To come between, or to be between, persons or things;
-- followed by between; as, the Mediterranean intervenes between Europe
and Africa. - To occur, fall, or come between, points of time, or
events; as, an instant intervened between the flash and the report;
nothing intervened ( i. e., between the intention and the execution) to
prevent the undertaking. - To interpose; as, to intervene to settle a quarrel. - In a suit to which one has not been made a party, to
put forward a defense of one's interest in the subject matter. - To come between.
- Midway between extremes - Transitional - Lying or being in the middle place or degree, or
between two extremes; coming or done between; intervening; interposed;
interjacent; as, an intermediate space or time; intermediate colors. - To come between; to intervene; to interpose.
- African leader made us come between Wolfgang and Mozart - Composer made us a fiddle - Falco hit, Rock Me ... - Middleman made us come between Wolfgang and Mozart - Mozart’s middle name
- Act as peacemaker, mediate - Meddle - Mediate - Step in - To pass between; to intervene. - To act between parties with a view to reconcile
differences; to make intercession; to beg or plead in behalf of
another; to mediate; -- usually followed by with and for; as, I will
intercede with him for you. - To be, to come, or to pass, between; to separate.
- Throw in a remark - Utteran interruption - To throw in between; to insert; to interpose. - To throw one's self between or among; to come
between; to interpose.