0 someone who works with two people or groups to help them agree on something important -- mediator/ka, pośredni-k/czka
I seek to determine what the intermediary movement between cultural policy and popular music has been like.
She becomes more than simply an intermediary, taking on some real responsibility for the words provided by the teacher.
The intermediary is not part of the initial distribution of endowments, but his technology allows costless transformation of any good in his consumption good.
Diagnosis and troubleshooting systems can acquire information regarding the system to be diagnosed directly from the device (on-line) or through human or electronic intermediaries (off-line).
Yet little attention is paid to the cost of derivative transactions other than the existence of intermediary expenses.
By the sixteenth century he had become an important intermediary between the two houses.
Individuals who fail to obtain production opportunities appoint intermediaries to write debt contracts with producers.
In some other localities, however, the age-abundance curve was peaked and maximum parasite abundance occurred in hosts of intermediary age.