intercommunicability
The new building's design ensures intercommunicability between all departments.
Noun (uncountable): The quality or state of being capable of mutual communication or interconnection between systems, groups, or individuals. It refers to the ability to exchange information, signals, or messages freely and effectively.
- (The networks could exchange information without barriers.)
- (They examine how different dialects can communicate with each other.)
- (Teams needed to coordinate effectively through shared communication channels.)
"to ensure intercommunicability": to guarantee that different systems or groups can communicate.
- Engineers designed the software to ensure intercommunicability between old and new hardware. (They made sure both could exchange data.)
"to hinder intercommunicability": to obstruct or reduce the ability to communicate.
- The language barrier hindered intercommunicability among the international delegates. (It made mutual understanding difficult.)
Intercommunicate (verb): to communicate mutually or reciprocally.
- The two departments must intercommunicate regularly to avoid duplication of effort. (They need to exchange information.)
Intercommunication (noun): the act or process of communicating between parties.
- Modern technology has greatly improved intercommunication across continents. (It enables faster exchange of messages.)
Intercommunicable (adjective): capable of being communicated mutually.
- The data format is intercommunicable between different software platforms. (It can be shared.)
- Mutual communicability: the shared ability to exchange information.
- Interconnectivity: the state of being linked together for communication.
- Interoperability: the ability of different systems to work together and exchange data.
On the same wavelength: to understand each other easily and communicate well.
- The two scientists were on the same wavelength, ensuring intercommunicability of their research findings. (They shared a common understanding.)
Speak the same language: to have a shared framework for communication.
- For the merger to succeed, the companies must speak the same language in terms of intercommunicability. (They need compatible systems.)
- Incommunicability: the inability to communicate or be communicated.
- Isolation: the state of being separated from others, preventing communication.