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A.Word.A.Day--circularcircular (SUHR-kyuh-luhr) adjective 1. In the shape of or related to a circle. 2. Roundabout, indirect. 3. Involving fallacious reasoning that tries to prove something previously assumed true. noun A widely distributed letter, notice, advertisement, etc. [From Middle English circuler, from Middle French, from Latin circularis, from circulus (small circle), diminutive of circus (circle or ring), from Greek kirkos (circle).] So the term "three-ring circus" has, in fact, four "rings" in it, etymologically speaking. Other words derived from the same source are circuit, circulate, and search (in the sense of "to go around").] -Anu
"In writing or logic classes many of us learned -- and put aside - that
`to beg the question' is a logical fallacy that refers to circular
reasoning. It is an argument that assumes as a truth the point the
speaker is arguing for. To borrow an example ... `This painting is trash
because it is obviously worthless.'"
"He claimed clarification was received in a circular signed by the
Permanent Secretary S.A. Suleiman ..." This week's theme: words from mathematics that have other meanings as well.
X-BonusLaughter is a form of internal jogging. -Norman Cousins, editor and author (1915-1990) |
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