From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishinteractivein‧ter‧ac‧tive /ˌɪntərˈæktɪv◂/ ●●○ AWL adjective 1 TDan interactive computer program, television system etc allows you to communicate directly with it, and does things in reaction to your actions interactive computer systems the museum’s interactive exhibits2 TOGETHERinvolving talking and working together interactive teaching methods such as role playing —interactively adverb —interactivity /ˌɪntərækˈtɪvəti/ noun [uncountable]
Examples from the Corpus
interactive• an interactive education package for 7-10 year olds• The museum features interactive exhibits.• When designing your site, think about whether it needs to be interactive or informational.• an interactive software program• Our school encourages interactive teaching methods.From Longman Business Dictionaryinteractivein‧ter‧act‧ive /ˌɪntərˈæktɪv◂/ adjectiveCOMPUTING interactive television, computer software etc allows the person using it to affect what happens on the screentechnology that will let people play the lottery via the internet, mobile phones and interactive televisiona world-wide publisher of interactive entertainment software. —interactivity noun [uncountable]The most noticeable feature of the Internet is its two-way interactivity.