Hi there, Circle in Latin is ---- orbis
Circulus is the Latin-English translation for the word circle. The Latin word orbis can also be used in place of circle.
orbis fidei
A Latin equivalent of the English noun 'top' is turbo. Its literal meaning is 'a movement in a circle, a whirling round, an eddy'. But one of its looser translations is 'a child's top'. Other Latin equivalents are cacumen and culmen, both of which refer to 'the top, the summit'.
Rarely seen in Latin (when borrowed from Greek). It comes from the Greek for wheel, or circle. Consequently when seen in English words it encompasses ideas of turning, circles, wheels, etc. Examples: encyclopedia (from kyklos -circle- and paideia -learning/education) bicycle (two-wheels) recycle (to turn again) encyclical (a letter sent around to a group)
Vac is Latin
Circulus is the Latin-English translation for the word circle. The Latin word orbis can also be used in place of circle.
full circle
If you mean circumference of a circle then that is its Latin roots
Maker of the world.
The word circle evolved from the Latin word circulus.
semi
Friends forever
"Circa" means 'around.'
Circle comes from the Latin, circulus which referred to the circus circle {ring}. It is akin to the Greek, Krikos {ring}.
It comes from the Latin. "Circus" means ring. "Circulus" means "small ring." That got shortened to "circle."
The word circus comes from the latin word kirkos which means circle ring.
orbis fidei