interdispute

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

inter- +‎ dispute

Adjective[edit]

interdispute (comparative more interdispute, superlative most interdispute)

  1. Occurring during peaceful times between disputes.
    • 2000, Manus I. Midlarsky, Handbook of War Studies II - Volume 2, →ISBN, page 232:
      Rivalries began with the first dispute and continued as long as there were disputes, assuming that the interdispute waiting time was not too long.
    • 2001, Paul F. Diehl, Gary Goertz, War and Peace in International Rivalry, →ISBN, page 100:
      Instead of using the interdispute period as part of the dependent variable, it appears as the independent variable in the "frustration-aggression" deterrence hypothesis: can early deterrence success lead to failure in later crises?
    • 2016, Lesley G. Terris, Mediation of International Conflicts: A Rational Model, →ISBN, page 47:
      The data set includes 1,853 militarized interstate disputes (MIDs) that capture three types of events: (1) dispute years in which mediation took place, (2) dispute years in which mediation did not take place and (3) mediation attempts that took place in interdispute years.

Noun[edit]

interdispute (plural interdisputes)

  1. A dispute between multiple groups or rival factions.
    • 1948, United States. Congress. House. Committee on Education and Labor, Investigation of Associated Actors and Artists of America and Affiliated Union, page 132:
      If I may, prior to your conversation with Mr. Faine and Mr. Fox, I would like to point out — and I think it is important — that during this interdispute that they had between the three labor unions, I was sort of caught in the middle.
    • 1987, Salīm Wākīm, Iran, the Arabs, and the West: the story of twenty-five centuries:
      But alas, the bright civilization of the East produced by several millennia vanished amid the medieval age into which Europe as a whole was plunged. This, chiefly because of its interdisputes and then because of the barbarian onslaughts on their countries.
    • 2002, Individual Employment Rights Cases - Volume 17, page 1189:
      The Legislature appears to have made a policy decision, based on financial interdispute that secondhand tobacco smoke, and its effect on the health of the public, is a matter of deep and abiding public interest.