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
Each bride’s dress has been billowed out and arranged around her in a circle, and these white figures are scattered at irregular intervals throughout the green field.—Peter Hessler, New Yorker, 21 Mar. 2026 By the finale, Paul has discovered Mortensen has been seeing a woman in their social circle, and the morning she’s set to head off to the Bachelor mansion, Mortensen is filmed leaving her house.—Rebecca Jennings, Vulture, 20 Mar. 2026
Verb
Among the news articles and pamphlets was a flier with a photo of Stephen Miller's face circled in red with a line through it.—Arkansas Online, 22 Mar. 2026 Perennial relegation strugglers at that point, Villa were circling the Premier League plughole.—Stuart James, New York Times, 21 Mar. 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