Word of the Day: circumscribe

samedi 27 décembre 2014

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for December 28, 2014 is:

circumscribe • \SER-kum-skrybe\ • verb

1 a : to constrict the range or activity of b : to define or mark off carefully 2 a : to draw a line around b : to surround by or as if by a boundary



Examples:

Detective Harris's efforts to find evidence linking Muddleston to the murder were circumscribed by laws prohibiting illegal searches and seizures.



"While the Christmas spirit should not be circumscribed by a ledger sheet, we should be buoyed by news that Americans' incomes rose, even very modestly, and that gasoline prices continue to fall dramatically." — Asbury Park Press (New Jersey), December 1, 2014



Did you know?

Circumscribe has a lot of relatives in English. Its Latin predecessor circumscribere (which roughly translates as "to draw a circle around") derives from cir$#@!-, meaning "circle," and scribere, meaning "to write or draw." Among the many descendants of cir$#@!- are circuit, circumcise, circumference, circumnavigate, circumspect, circumstance, and circumvent. Scribere gave us such words as scribe and scribble, as well as ascribe, describe, and transcribe, among others. Circumscribe was first recorded in the 14th century; it was originally spelled circumscrive, but the "circumscribe" spelling had also appeared by the end of the century.









Word of the Day: circumscribe

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