Advertisement
Advertisement
circum-
1- a prefix with the meaning “round about, around,” found in Latin loanwords, especially derivatives of verbs that had the general senses “to encompass or surround” ( circumference; circumjacent; circumstance ) or “to go around” by the means or in the manner specified by the verb ( circumnavigate; circumscribe ); on this basis forming adjectives in English with the meaning “surrounding” that named by the stem ( circumocular; circumpolar ).
circum.
2abbreviation for
- circumference.
circum-
prefix
- around; surrounding; on all sides
circumrotate
circumlocution
circum–
- A prefix meaning “around”, as in circumscribe, to draw a figure around another figure.
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of circum-1
Example Sentences
But the Latinate words that the dance brings to mind are the ones that start with “circum,” or ”around.”
“It got me thinking about the roots of the word ‘circumstance,’ which are ‘circum,’ meaning ‘circle,’ and ‘stance,’ or standing, I thought, wow, how apropos that was.”
He and more than 1,000 other immigrants in similar circumstances say they should have a chance to return to their homes and families while fighting deportation.
For another, a conversation, under these circumstances, is an intimate act that calls for more delicacy than “be blunt.”
And that, at least, gave me some hope: that even under ordinary circum- stances, I still might find a way to live an extraordinary life.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse