Noun
a middle way between two extremes
Source: WordNetAlso, when I used to follow some occasions or ceremonies via media outlets, I used to find him partaking either in the audience or as a speaker until the very last moments during which his body used to assist him. Source: Internet
Newman himself subsequently rejected the theory of the via media, as essentially historicist and static; and hence unable to accommodate any dynamic development within the church. Source: Internet
The "via media" was expressed so adroitly in the Articles that some Anglican scholars have labelled their content as an early example of the idea that the doctrine of Anglicanism is one of "Reformed Catholicism". Source: Internet
As such, it is often referred to as being a via media (or "middle way") between these traditions. Source: Internet
Sri Lanka’s cricket board today said it will extend its fullest cooperation to the International Cricket Council to investigate the latest allegations levelled via media reports, over ‘match fixing’. Source: Internet
The Church of Sweden was, according to Söderblom, in an even higher degree than the Anglican Church a via media. Source: Internet