Of or situated on the inside; relating to the inside of the body; relating to the domestic affairs of a country; existing or occurring within an organisation.
Origin
From Medieval Latin internalis (inward, internal), from Latin internus (inward, within), from inter (between, within). Used in English from the mid-16th century.
⚠ Google UK English voices not detected. Transcript-only mode active.
Ready
🎧 Podcast 2 — Daily Use
Internal in Conversation
Two British speakers · Real everyday dialogue
⚠ Google UK English voices not detected. Transcript-only mode active.
Ready
🌟 Podcast 3 — Prompt Engineering
Internal — AI Prompts
5 copyable & speakable prompt cards · Google UK English voices
⚠ Google UK English voices not detected. Transcript-only mode active.