English » Slovenian

I . cir·cle [ˈsɜ:kl̩] N

1. circle (round shape):

krog m
to have circles under one's eyes
to go round in circles

2. circle (group of people):

krog m
runda f

3. circle no pl (in theatre):

balkon m

II . cir·cle [ˈsɜ:kl̩] VB trans

1. circle (draw):

2. circle (walk):

III . cir·cle [ˈsɜ:kl̩] VB intr

Arc·tic ˈCircle N

dress ˈcir·cle N THEAT

po·lar ˈcir·cle N

ˈtraf·fic cir·cle N Am

vi·cious ˈcir·cle N, vi·cious ˈcy·cle N

Usage examples with circles

in upper-class circles
to go round in circles

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Given an arbitrary point on a torus, four circles can be drawn through it.
en.wikipedia.org
In holistic healing circles and popular alternative medicine folklore, royal jelly is believed to have anti-aging properties.
en.wikipedia.org
Obligingly, it circles back with grand, slow wingbeats and everyone sees it alight on a jagged snag.
www.ottawacitizen.com
There are several well-known formulas for the areas of simple shapes such as triangles, rectangles, and circles.
en.wikipedia.org
This can be called an accepted paradigm, which in some circles or societies takes the form of a denunciative stance towards revisionism of any kind.
en.wikipedia.org
Sometimes they make concentric circles clockwise and anti-clockwise.
en.wikipedia.org
Another generalization is the dual of the first extension, namely, to construct circles with three specified tangential distances from the three given circles.
en.wikipedia.org
There has also been speculation that crop circles have a relation to ley lines.
en.wikipedia.org
The centers of these two circles are offset, causing eccentricity.
en.wikipedia.org
Such translations have become controversial in some circles.
en.wikipedia.org

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