be·tween In addition to the uses shown below, between is used in a few phrasal verbs, such as `come between'
If you must choose between two or more things, you must choose just one of them. Students will be able to choose between English, French and Russian as their first foreign language
A SQL comparison operator that determines whether an item falls between two values Often useful for dates
With relation to two, as involved in an act or attribute of which another is the agent or subject; as, to judge between or to choose between courses; to distinguish between you and me; to mediate between nations
If something stands between you and what you want, it prevents you from having it. His sense of duty often stood between him and the enjoyment of life
If people or things travel between two places, they travel regularly from one place to the other and back again. I spent a lot of time in the early Eighties travelling between London and Bradford
When you introduce a statement by saying `between you and me' or `between ourselves', you are indicating that you do not want anyone else to know what you are saying. Between you and me, though, it's been awful for business Between ourselves, I know he wants to marry her
If something is between two amounts or ages, it is greater or older than the first one and smaller or younger than the second one. Amsterdam is fun -- a third of its population is aged between 18 and
(zarf) arada, ortasında, araya, arasına, ortada, ortaya