midsized

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From mid- +‎ sized.

Adjective

midsized (not comparable)

  1. Of medium size, not particularly large or small
    • 2009 January 28, Natasha Singer, “Bristol-Myers’s Reliance on Three Drugs Casts Doubt on Strategy”, in The New York Times[1], archived from the original on 17 October 2015:
      “We are becoming a midsized company that is leaner, more agile and better able to execute our strategy,” James M. Cornelius, the chief executive of Bristol-Myers, said Tuesday in a call with investment analysts.
    • 2025 March 30, Nayeli Jaramillo-Plata, “‘A huge blow’: USDA cuts threaten to throw Wisconsin’s local food supply into disarray”, in CNN[2]:
      Without the funding, she warned, small and midsized farmers could lose financial stability, local food infrastructure could unravel and underserved communities could struggle to access fresh food.