Sentence examples for circularly from inspiring English sources

The word "circularly" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to describe things (places, objects, activities, etc.) that move in a circular motion or that form a circle. For example, you can say "The dancers moved circularly around the fire."

Dictionary

circularly

adverb

In a circular way.

Exact(33)

Which seemed to circularly imply that in order to publish a book one would have to already have published a book.

Besides the ontological economy of only requiring inertial motion and its attendant force effects, Descartes' choice of circularly moving bands of particles may have also been motivated by worries over, for lack of a better term, "plenum crowding".

3He can be put into this state by exposing it to a beam of so-called "circularly polarised" laser light, which can transfer its own spin to the nuclei.Having hyperpolarised the gas in the first place, the last challenge is to keep it that way for significant periods of time.

Instead of having cardboard "anaglyph" spectacles with a crude red filter for one eye and cyan for the other, the increasingly popular 3D system developed by RealD of Beverly Hills, California, relies on circularly polarised light with one lens polarising the light to the left, and the other to the right.

In 1817 he was the first to obtain circularly polarized light.

For example, a muscle that has some fibres running longitudinally and others running circularly and/or radially will become shorter and fatter when the longitudinal fibres shorten and will become longer and thinner when the circular and radial fibres shorten.

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Similar(8)

Finally, working out the resulting theory gives tools that are useful in studying collections of circularly-defined objects such as streams and trees.

There is clearly also a stronger sense of 'present' which does require assertoric force (for cases when the label is taken to apply), but that is just what we want to have (non-circularly) explained.

According to Ingarden, the realism/idealism problem is fundamentally a metaphysical problem (about the actual existence of the so-called 'real' world and its relation to consciousness), but may be non-circularly approached via ontology by examining what the possible sorts of relation between consciousness and the world could be.

Functionalists have suggested, however (Shoemaker 2001, McCullagh 2000, Tooley 2001), that there is a way of understanding the conditions under which beliefs can be caused by, and thus be about, one's second-order functional states that permits mental states and introspective beliefs about them to be non-circularly defined (but see Bealer 2001, for a skeptical response).

Of course, if the concrete particular is understood instead as a substrate in which a number of tropes are instantiated (a view proposed by Martin (1980) and by Heil (2003)) individuation can be non-circularly accounted for using OI.

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