central
[sεntrəl]

adjective

[Definition]: in the middle of

[Example Sentences]:
1. They were also central to legislation proposed by a bipartisan group of senators in 2013.
2. It was flagged by the central bank when it introduced the limit in 2013.
3. The US central bank has kept its benchmark borrowing costs near record lows since 2008.
4. Castro, a central Cold War figure, led the Cuban revolution that seized power in 1959.
5. That makes the central issue its political will to do so.
6. This is a new central place where you can manage the apps you use.
7. He has made his foreign policy experience central to his campaign.
8. The central issue is the scale of the problem and development resource constraints.
9. He said he believed they were still in the central Florida area.
10. Consumers should also place a router in the most central location possible in the home.
11. He said a request had been made to the central government in Kabul for more assistance.
12. Mr Trump has not yet taken such a central place in the Democratic convention.
13. This means delivering all data to a central location for analysis is impractical.


[Antonyms]remote, inaccessible, inconvenient

[Synonyms]convenient, medial, accessible
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