Word info Synonyms Antonyms

circumflex

Speech parts

1. circumflex - Noun

2. circumflex - Adjective

3. circumflex - Verb

Meaning

A wave of the voice embracing both a rise and fall or a fall and a rise on the same a syllable.

A character, or accent, denoting in Greek a rise and of the voice on the same long syllable, marked thus [~ or /]; and in Latin and some other languages, denoting a long and contracted syllable, marked [/ or ^]. See Accent, n., 2.

To mark or pronounce with a circumflex.

Moving or turning round; circuitous.

Curved circularly; -- applied to several arteries of the hip and thigh, to arteries, veins, and a nerve of the shoulder, and to other parts.

Source: Webster's dictionary

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Examples

Diacritics Three kinds of diacritic were in common use: the acute accent ´, the grave accent `, and the circumflex accent ˆ. These were normally only marked on vowels (e.g. í, è, â); but see below regarding que. Source: Internet

The acute accent (á, é, í, ó, ú) or circumflex accent (â, ê, î, ô, û, ŷ) marks long vowels in the Elvish languages. Source: Internet

The circumflex accent represented metrical length (generally not distinctively pronounced in the New Latin period) and was chiefly found over an a representing an ablative singular case, e.g. eâdem formâ "with the same shape". Source: Internet

However, French spellings have been altered : the silent 's' has been removed and replaced with the circumflex over the preceding vowel. Source: Internet

If a circumflex "^" is placed over a variable, then this is an "individual" value of y, meaning that "ŷ" indicates "individuals" (e. Source: Internet

In the mid-18th century, the circumflex was used in place of s after a vowel, where that letter s was not pronounced. Source: Internet

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