adv. and prep. poet. [mod. f. amid or midmost (itself a modern word), perh. influenced by the app. superlative form of AMIDST. Nothing similar in ME.]
A. adv. In the very middle or center. B. prep. (by elision) In the very center of.
1870. Morris, Earthly Par., II. iii. 37. He stopped amidmost of the hall. Ibid., III. iv. 52. A lake Amidmost which the fowl did take Their pastime.