Latin edit

Etymology edit

From inter (between) + (reflexive pronoun, acc).

Pronunciation edit

Adverb edit

inter (not comparable) (first-person inter nōs, second-person inter vōs)

  1. (third-person reciprocal) (with, among etc.) one another, each other; together, mutually
    Synonyms: alius alium, alter alterum, invicem
    inter sē amāreto be very fond of one another
    inter sē cōnsentīreto feel the same way, to agree among oneselves
    clam inter sē convenīreto have a meeting in secret
    inter sē atomōrum complexiōa mutual bond between atoms
    quae inter sē dissidentthings at variance to each other
    pugnantēs inter sē colōrēscolours that clash with each other
    numerōs inter sē multiplicāreto multiply (literally, “to fold numbers together with each other”)