Difference between round and ringlike
Definitions
noun
- the usual activities in your day
- an interval during which a recurring sequence of events occurs
- the course along which communications spread
- a partsong in which voices follow each other; one voice starts and others join in one after another until all are singing different parts of the song at the same time
- a charge of ammunition for a single shot
verb
- pronounce with rounded lips
- wind around; move along a circular course
- bring to a highly developed, finished, or refined state
- become round, plump, or shapely
- make round
adjective
- (mathematics) expressed to the nearest integer, ten, hundred, or thousand
- having the shape or form of a circle
- (of sounds) full and rich
adverb
- from beginning to end; throughout
Examples
When the King heard this, he bade his son be slain; but on the next day the second Wazir came forward for intercession and kissed ground in prostration.
Which is stupid, considering the drivers around here A: Don't normally stop for people and in fact have been caught trying to sneak ~around~ them and B: I've been nicked several times and almost hit three times different instances last summer attempting to obey the biking laws, none of those for mistakes on my part as I've been scared shitless at the lack of aware driving that's crept over my town.
They were now surrounded on all sides by a ring of excited, curious faces.
Definitions
adjective
- having the shape of a ring
Examples
So, Washington's temperature soared into the springlike 70s three times in five days, a true and welcome departure from wintry weeks of chill in which the mercury had not forayed even so high as 60.
My book should smell of pines, and resound with the hum of insects," might have been its motto, so sweet and wholesome was it with a springlike sort of freshness which plainly betrayed that the author had learned some of Nature's deepest secrets and possessed the skill to tell them in tuneful words.
A bright day, still blowy but with a warm west wind, everything damp and full of colour—springlike.