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NOUN
  1. a negotiator who acts as a link between parties

How To Use go-between In A Sentence

  • The mafioso is seduced – more irony – by his opponent's embodiment of British "fair play" and Makepiece becomes a naive confidante and go-between in the proposed trade-off with MI6. Our Kind of Traitor by John le Carré
  • That they used go-betweens, rather than resolve the dispute between themselves, is a telling commentary about the intensity of the wariness and abrasion that has become knitted into that tortuous relationship.
  • It acts as a go-between for banks seeking anonymity when trading bonds, derivatives or equities. Times, Sunday Times
  • Goodwife also is fashionable go-between , her job is the inspiration that provides the life to European female, help them enjoy delicate life.
  • A parent who decides that a child is ready to marry may contact agencies, go-betweens, relatives, and friends to find an appropriate mate.
  • A UN representative will act as a go-between for leaders of the two countries.
  • Google not only sells ads to accompany search results, but it is also becoming an online ad network, serving as the go-between for advertisers and site publishers across the Web.
  • With one farmer acting as go-between, eventually you would hear the smack of spittle-wetted palms signifying a satisfactory result all round.
  • Your uncle may be able to act as a go-between. The Sun
  • And yet, if you reintroduce the idea of absentmindedness, which acts as a go-between, you will see this profound comic element uniting with the most superficial type. Laughter : an Essay on the Meaning of the Comic
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