intersource

English

Etymology

From inter- +‎ source.

Adjective

intersource (not comparable)

  1. Between sources.
    • 1981, John C. Sawhill, Robert A. Bohm, Lillian A. Clinard, World energy production and productivity:
      There have not been any major intersource shifts, but there has been a small tendency for the share of electricity to increase, as shown in Figure 14-6.
    • 2009, R. T. Dean, The Oxford handbook of computer music, page 440:
      Here, the source memory and the target signal are from different sources, so soundspotting in this context performs intersource matching.

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