English edit

Etymology edit

inter- +‎ ministerial

Adjective edit

interministerial (not comparable)

  1. Between ministers.
    • 1998 March 20, Nigel Williams, “SPAIN: Funding Outlook Improves, But Job Crisis Remains”, in Science[1], volume 279, number 5358, →DOI, pages 1844–1845:
      The increase followed a rise in science's political prominence: Last year, the prime minister himself took charge of an interministerial commission that oversees science policy and funding, and the government has also created a new Office of Science and Technology to bolster policy. "
    • 1999 July 30, Pallava Bagla, “FREEDOM OF INFORMATION:Indian Scientists Question Government Grip on Data”, in Science[2], volume 285, number 5428, →DOI:
      Gaining access to such maps means navigating through an interministerial bureaucratic procedure with at least 15 stages of negotiations.
  2. Between ministries.
    • 2013 September 30, “Inter-Ministerial Conference on the 30th of September 2013 Palais d’Egmont-Brussels”, in Science[3]:
      "Inter-Ministerial" Conference on the 30th of September 2013 Palais d’Egmont-Brussels.

Translations edit

Romanian edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from French interministériel.

Adjective edit

interministerial m or n (feminine singular interministerială, masculine plural interministeriali, feminine and neuter plural interministeriale)

  1. interministerial

Declension edit

Spanish edit

Adjective edit

interministerial m or f (masculine and feminine plural interministeriales)

  1. interministerial

Further reading edit