different between body vs circle

body

English

Alternative forms

  • bodie (obsolete)

Etymology

From Middle English bodi, bodi?, from Old English bodi?, bode? (body, trunk, chest, torso, height, stature), from Proto-West Germanic *bodag (body, trunk), from Proto-Indo-European *b?ewd?- (to be awake, observe).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?b?di/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /?b?di/, [?b??i]
  • Rhymes: -?di
  • Hyphenation: bod?y
  • Homophone: bawdy (in accents with the cot-caught merger)

Noun

body (countable and uncountable, plural bodies)

  1. Physical frame.
    1. The physical structure of a human or animal seen as one single organism. [from 9th c.]
      I saw them walking from a distance, their bodies strangely angular in the dawn light.
    2. The fleshly or corporeal nature of a human, as opposed to the spirit or soul. [from 13th c.]
      The body is driven by desires, but the soul is at peace.
    3. A corpse. [from 13th c.]
      Her body was found at four o'clock, just two hours after the murder.
    4. (archaic or informal except in compounds) A person. [from 13th c.]
      • 1749, Henry Fielding, Tom Jones, Folio Society 1973, page 463:
        Indeed, if it belonged to a poor body, it would be another thing; but so great a lady, to be sure, can never want it []
      • 1876, Mark Twain, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Chapter 28:
        Sometime I've set right down and eat WITH him. But you needn't tell that. A body's got to do things when he's awful hungry he wouldn't want to do as a steady thing.
      What's a body gotta do to get a drink around here?
    5. (sociology) A human being, regarded as marginalized or oppressed.
      • 1999, Devon Carbado, Black Men on Race, Gender, and Sexuality: A Critical Reader (page 87)
        This, of course, was not about the State, but it was certainly an invasion: black bodies acting out in a public domain circumscribed by a racist culture. The Garvey movement presents an example of black bodies transgressing racialized spatial boundaries.
      • 2012, Trystan T. Cotten, Transgender Migrations (page 3)
        In doing so, Haritaworn also rethinks the marginality of transgender bodies and practices in queer movements and spaces.
      • 2016, Laura Harrison, Brown Bodies, White Babies (page 5)
        As the title suggests, this project is particularly interested in how race intersects with reproductive technologies—how brown bodies are deployed in the creation of white babies.
  2. Main section.
    1. The torso, the main structure of a human or animal frame excluding the extremities (limbs, head, tail). [from 9th c.]
      The boxer took a blow to the body.
    2. The largest or most important part of anything, as distinct from its appendages or accessories. [from 11th c.]
      The bumpers and front tyres were ruined, but the body of the car was in remarkable shape.
    3. (archaic) The section of a dress extending from the neck to the waist, excluding the arms. [from 16th c.]
      Penny was in the scullery, pressing the body of her new dress.
    4. The content of a letter, message, or other printed or electronic document, as distinct from signatures, salutations, headers, and so on. [from 17th c.]
    5. (The addition of quotations indicative of this usage is being sought:) A bodysuit. [from 19th c.]
    6. (programming) The code of a subroutine, contrasted to its signature and parameters. [from 20th c.]
      In many programming languages, the method body is enclosed in braces.
  3. Coherent group.
    1. A group of people having a common purpose or opinion; a mass. [from 16th c.]
      I was escorted from the building by a body of armed security guards.
    2. An organisation, company or other authoritative group. [from 17th c.]
      The local train operating company is the managing body for this section of track.
    3. A unified collection of details, knowledge or information. [from 17th c.]
      We have now amassed a body of evidence which points to one conclusion.
  4. Material entity.
    1. Any physical object or material thing. [from 14th c.]
      All bodies are held together by internal forces.
    2. (uncountable) Substance; physical presence. [from 17th c.]
      • 1922, Virginia Woolf, Jacob's Room Chapter 1
        The voice had an extraordinary sadness. Pure from all body, pure from all passion, going out into the world, solitary, unanswered, breaking against rocks—so it sounded.
      We have given body to what was just a vague idea.
    3. (uncountable) Comparative viscosity, solidity or substance (in wine, colours etc.). [from 17th c.]
      The red wine, sadly, lacked body.
    4. An agglomeration of some substance, especially one that would be otherwise uncountable.
      • 1806 June 26, Thomas Paine, "The cause of Yellow Fever and the means of preventing it, in places not yet infected with it, addressed to the Board of Health in America", The political and miscellaneous works of Thomas Paine, page 179:
        In a gentle breeze, the whole body of air, as far as the breeze extends, moves at the rate of seven or eight miles an hour; in a high wind, at the rate of seventy, eighty, or an hundred miles an hour []
      • 2012 March 19, Helge Løseth, Nuno Rodrigues and Peter R. Cobbold, "World's largest extrusive body of sand?", Geology, volume 40, issue 5
        Using three-dimensional seismic and well data from the northern North Sea, we describe a large (10 km3) body of sand and interpret it as extrusive.
      • 2018, VOA Learning English > China's Melting Glacier Brings Visitors, Adds to Climate Concerns
        The huge body of ice is in the southeastern edge of a Central Asian region called the Third Pole. 
      The English Channel is a body of water lying between Great Britain and France.
  5. (printing) The shank of a type, or the depth of the shank (by which the size is indicated).
    a nonpareil face on an agate body
    • 1992, Mary Kay Duggan, ?Italian Music Incunabula: Printers and Type (page 99)
      The stemless notes could have been cast on a body as short as 4 mm but were probably cast on bodies of the standard 14 mm size for ease of composition.
  6. (geometry) A three-dimensional object, such as a cube or cone.

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:body
  • See also Thesaurus:corpse

Derived terms

Pages starting with “body”.

Translations

See also

  • corporal
  • corporeal

Verb

body (third-person singular simple present bodies, present participle bodying, simple past and past participle bodied)

  1. To give body or shape to something.
    And as imagination bodies forth / The forms of things unknown, the poet's pen / Turns them to shapes and gives to airy nothing / A local habitation and a name. — Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  2. To construct the bodywork of a car.
  3. (transitive) To embody.
  4. (transitive, slang, African-American Vernacular) To murder someone.
  5. (transitive, slang, African-American Vernacular, by extension) To utterly defeat someone.
  6. (transitive, slang, video games) to hard counter a particular character build or play style. Frequently used in the passive voice form, get bodied by.

References


Anagrams

  • BYOD, Boyd, Doby, do by

Czech

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?bod?/
  • Rhymes: -od?
  • Hyphenation: bo?dy

Etymology 1

From English body, bodysuit.

Noun

body n (indeclinable)

  1. bodysuit, leotard

Etymology 2

See the etymology of the main entry.

Noun

body

  1. nominative/accusative/vocative/instrumental plural of bod

Anagrams

  • doby

Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from English body.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?b?.di/
  • Hyphenation: bo?dy

Noun

body m (plural body's, diminutive body'tje n)

  1. A leotard.
  2. Body, substance.

Finnish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?body/, [?bo?dy]
  • IPA(key): /?bodi/, [?bo?di]
  • Rhymes: -ody
  • Homophone: bodi
  • Syllabification: bo?dy

Noun

body

  1. snapsuit, diaper shirt, onesies (infant bodysuit)

Declension

Pronunciation ?body:


Italian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?b?.di/

Noun

body m (invariable)

  1. leotard
    Synonym: calzamaglia

Further reading

  • body in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana

Scots

Alternative forms

  • bodie

Etymology

From Middle English body, bodi?, from Old English bodi?, bode? (body, trunk, chest, torso, height, stature).

Noun

body (plural bodies)

  1. body
  2. person, human being

Spanish

Noun

body m (plural bodys or bodies)

  1. bodysuit

body From the web:

  • what body type am i
  • what body temp is too low
  • what body shape am i
  • what body system is the liver in
  • what body temperature is considered a fever
  • what body temp is hypothermia
  • what body fat percentage is obese
  • what body shape am i quiz


circle

English

Etymology

From Middle English circle, cercle, from Old French cercle and Latin circulus, diminutive of Latin circus (circle, circus), from Ancient Greek ?????? (kírkos, circle, ring), related to Old English hring (ring). Compare also Old English ?ircul (circle, zodiac), which came from the same Latin source.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: sûr?-k?l, IPA(key): /?s??k?l/
    • (UK) IPA(key): [?s??.k??]
    • (US) IPA(key): [?s?.k??]
  • Rhymes: -??(?)k?l
  • Homophone: cercal
  • Hyphenation: cir?cle

Noun

circle (plural circles)

  1. (geometry) A two-dimensional geometric figure, a line, consisting of the set of all those points in a plane that are equally distant from a given point (center).
    Synonyms: (not in mathematical use) coil, (not in mathematical use) ring, (not in mathematical use) loop
  2. A two-dimensional geometric figure, a disk, consisting of the set of all those points of a plane at a distance less than or equal to a fixed distance (radius) from a given point.
    Synonyms: disc, (in mathematical and general use) disk, (not in mathematical use; UK & Commonwealth only) round
  3. Any shape, curve or arrangement of objects that approximates to or resembles the geometric figures.
    Children, please join hands and form a circle.
    1. Any thin three-dimensional equivalent of the geometric figures.
    2. A curve that more or less forms part or all of a circle.
  4. A specific group of persons; especially one who shares a common interest.
    Synonyms: bunch, gang, group
    • At half-past nine on this Saturday evening, the parlour of the Salutation Inn, High Holborn, contained most of its customary visitors. [] In former days every tavern of repute kept such a room for its own select circle, a club, or society, of habitués, who met every evening, for a pipe and a cheerful glass.
    • “I don't mean all of your friends—only a small proportion—which, however, connects your circle with that deadly, idle, brainless bunch—the insolent chatterers at the opera, the gorged dowagers, [], the jewelled animals whose moral code is the code of the barnyard—!"
    • 1922, Margery Williams, The Velveteen Rabbit
      The Rabbit could not claim to be a model of anything, for he didn’t know that real rabbits existed; he thought they were all stuffed with sawdust like himself, and he understood that sawdust was quite out-of-date and should never be mentioned in modern circles.
  5. The orbit of an astronomical body.
  6. (cricket) A line comprising two semicircles of 30 yards radius centred on the wickets joined by straight lines parallel to the pitch used to enforce field restrictions in a one-day match.
  7. (Wicca) A ritual circle that is cast three times deosil and closes three times widdershins either in the air with a wand or literally with stones or other items used for worship.
  8. (South Africa) A traffic circle or roundabout.
  9. (obsolete) Compass; circuit; enclosure.
  10. (astronomy) An instrument of observation, whose graduated limb consists of an entire circle. When fixed to a wall in an observatory, it is called a mural circle; when mounted with a telescope on an axis and in Y's, in the plane of the meridian, a meridian or transit circle; when involving the principle of reflection, like the sextant, a reflecting circle; and when that of repeating an angle several times continuously along the graduated limb, a repeating circle.
  11. A series ending where it begins, and repeating itself.
    • Thus in a circle runs the peasant's pain.
  12. (logic) A form of argument in which two or more unproved statements are used to prove each other; inconclusive reasoning.
    • 1661, Joseph Glanvill, The Vanity of Dogmatizing
      That heavy bodies descend by gravity; and, again, that gravity is a quality whereby a heavy body descends, is an impertinent circle and teaches nothing.
  13. Indirect form of words; circumlocution.
    • 1610, Ben Jonson, The Alchemist
      Has he given the lie, / In circle, or oblique, or semicircle.
  14. A territorial division or district.
  15. (in the plural) A bagginess of the skin below the eyes from lack of sleep.

Derived terms

Related terms

  • circular
  • circulate
  • circus

Descendants

  • Pitcairn-Norfolk: sirkil

Translations

Verb

circle (third-person singular simple present circles, present participle circling, simple past and past participle circled)

  1. (transitive) To travel around along a curved path.
    The wolves circled the herd of deer.
  2. (transitive) To surround.
    A high fence circles the enclosure.
    • 1699, William Dampier, Voyages and Descriptions
      Their heads are circled with a short turban.
    • 1798, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, The Dungeon
      So he lies, circled with evil.
  3. (transitive) To place or mark a circle around.
    Circle the jobs that you are interested in applying for.
  4. (intransitive) To travel in circles.
    Vultures circled overhead.

Derived terms

  • circle the drain

Translations

Anagrams

  • cleric

circle From the web:

  • what circles the nucleus
  • what circle of hell is lust
  • what circles the planets
  • what circles do loadouts drop
  • what circles the nucleus of an atom
  • what circle of hell is gluttony
  • what circle of hell do i belong in
  • what circle of hell is greed
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