halfway
See also: Halfway
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle English halfwey, from Old English healfweġ (“half-way”), equivalent to half- + way. Cognate with Saterland Frisian hoolfwais (“halfway”), Dutch halfweg (“halfway”), German halbwegs (“halfway”), Danish halvvejs (“halfway”), Swedish halvvägs (“halfway”).
Pronunciation
Adverb
halfway (not comparable)
- Half of the way between two points; midway.
- I was already halfway home when I missed my keyring.
- One day has gone by and she's already halfway through the book.
- It's July 1st, so this year is halfway over.
- 1989, Octavia E. Butler, “Part III, Chapter 7”, in Imago, page 210:
- Just over halfway up, we reached the Human settlement with its houses of stone and wood and thatch.
- 2010 March 25, Corey Kilgannon, “When Meeting Halfway Means in the Street”, in The New York Times[1]:
- "He comes halfway and I come halfway," said Mr. Korson, 56.
- Moderately; somewhat.
- a halfway decent place to sleep
Derived terms
Translations
midway
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See also
Adjective
halfway (not comparable)