different between established vs circumscribed
established
English
Etymology
From establish +? -ed.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??stæb.l??t/
- Hyphenation: es?tab?lished
Verb
established
- simple past tense and past participle of establish
Adjective
established (comparative more established, superlative most established)
- Having been in existence for a long time and therefore recognized and generally accepted.
- Of a religion, church etc.: formally recognized by a state as being official within that area.
- 2009, Diarmaid MacCulloch, A History of Christianity, Penguin 2010, p. 731:
- Anglicanism did manage to strengthen its position in the southern English American colonies after Charles II's restoration (even in cosmopolitan New York), gaining established status in six out of the eventual thirteen.
- 2009, Diarmaid MacCulloch, A History of Christianity, Penguin 2010, p. 731:
- (Model, procedure, disease) Explicitly defined, described or recognized as a reference.
Synonyms
- estd. (abbreviation)
Derived terms
- established church
- long-established
- well-established
Translations
established From the web:
- what established judicial review
- what established that the king's power was limited
- what established the supreme court
- what established the federal court system
- what established separate but equal
- what established the federal reserve system
- what established a government
- what established the government of the northwest territory
circumscribed
English
Verb
circumscribed
- simple past tense and past participle of circumscribe
circumscribed From the web:
- circumscribed meaning
- what circumscribed amnesia
- what does circumscribed mean
- what is circumscribed circle
- what does circumscribed mean in geometry
- what is circumscribed agency
- what does circumscribed mass mean
- what does circumscribed mean in medical terms
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- established vs circumscribed
- blare vs echo
- oil vs gen
- graceful vs fleet
- halting vs clumsy
- slow vs phlegmatic
- crooked vs cheating
- theory vs commentary
- vindictive vs hard
- perilous vs unsteady
- cursory vs halfhearted
- uncomfortable vs ticklish
- vigour vs influence
- immorally vs basely
- ascetic vs selfdenying
- ineffectual vs unemployed
- shove vs propel
- comprehensive vs broadened
- epistles vs dispatches
- jostle vs agitation