Noun
She drew a circle around the correct answer.
We formed a circle around the campfire.
He looked old and tired, with dark circles under his eyes.
She has a large circle of friends.
She is well-known in banking circles. Verb
He circled his arms around his wife's waist.
His arms circled around his wife's waist.
She circled the correct answer.
The pilot circled the airport before landing.
The halfback circled to the left.
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Noun
Ovechkin then rifled home a wrister from the left circle to end a four-game goal drought.—CBS News, 6 Jan. 2026 That belief makes the experience feel like a powerful full-circle moment.—Ashley Vega, PEOPLE, 6 Jan. 2026
Verb
The Pittsburgh Penguins were on their toes and circling, pelting goaltender Jet Greaves with puck after puck.—Aaron Portzline, New York Times, 5 Jan. 2026 Or Frost Science in Miami turns everyone into a kid — sharks circling a multi-story aquarium, planetarium shows that reset anyone’s sense of scale, exhibits that invite visitors to touch first and read second.—Eric Barton, Sun Sentinel, 4 Jan. 2026 See All Example Sentences for circle
Word History
Etymology
Noun and Verb
Middle English cercle, from Anglo-French, from Latin circulus, diminutive of circus circle, circus, from or akin to Greek krikos, kirkos ring; akin to Old English hring ring — more at ring
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