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circumfluent

American  
[ser-kuhm-floo-uhnt] / sərˈkʌm flu ənt /

adjective

  1. flowing around; encompassing.


Other Word Forms

  • circumfluence noun

Etymology

Origin of circumfluent

First recorded in 1570–80, from Latin circumfluent- (stem of circumfluēns, present participle of circumfluere “to flow around”); circum-, fluent

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The sheer presence of a piano, and the percussive but circumfluent style embodied by Mr. Iyer, go a long way toward inoculating this music against that outcome.

From New York Times • Mar. 14, 2011

Magellan had shown that the world was round and poised in space, instead of flat and surrounded by a circumfluent ocean.

From The History of Education; educational practice and progress considered as a phase of the development and spread of western civilization by Cubberley, Ellwood Patterson

But presently she spied, somewhere in the dark, a group of faces, looking white through the circumfluent blackness, the eyes of them fixed in amaze, if not in terror, upon herself.

From Weighed and Wanting by MacDonald, George

The lacrymal gland drinks up a certain fluid from the circumfluent blood, and pours it on the ball of the eye, on the upper part of the external corner of the eyelids.

From Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life by Darwin, Erasmus

Many of our muscular motions are excited by perpetual irritations, as those of the heart and arterial system by the circumfluent blood.

From Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life by Darwin, Erasmus