To disintermediate in economics is to cut out the middleman, simplifying a transaction by selling directly to a consumer instead of using a distributor.
Disintermediate essentially means "remove the intermediaries," a word with a Latin root defined as "that which is between." So in the business and financial worlds, whenever you remove people or steps in the middle of a transaction, you disintermediate. In banking, this might mean buying stocks directly instead of hiring a money manager. And in manufacturing it could be selling goods online to customers, instead of hiring distributors and selling to stores.
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These words are two sides of the same coin: ways to get more or to make something go further. One side is about saving; the other is about spending less.
Warning! These similar sounding words have very different meanings. To prescribe is to recommend and to proscribe is to forbid. One little letter makes a big difference.
Both have to do with right and wrong, but amoral means having no sense of either, like a fish, but the evil immoral describes someone who knows the difference, doesn't care, and says "mwah ha ha" while twirling a mustache.
A correlation is exactly what it sounds like: a co-relation, or relationship — like the correlation between early birds waking up and the sun rising. But corollary is more like a consequence, like the corollary of the rooster crowing because you smacked it in the beak. Both words love the math lab but can hang with the rest of us, too.
Both words have to do with the mind, but it's more important to be conscious, or awake, than conscience, or aware of right and wrong. Remain conscious while listening to your friend's moral dilemma so you can use your conscience to give good advice.
Novelists, magicians, and other tricksters keep these words busy. Novelists love an allusion, an indirect reference to something like a secret treasure for the reader to find; magicians heart illusions, or fanciful fake-outs; but tricksters suffer from delusions, ideas that have no basis in reality.
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