CIRCULATION
\sˌɜːkjʊlˈe͡ɪʃən], \sˌɜːkjʊlˈeɪʃən], \s_ˌɜː_k_j_ʊ_l_ˈeɪ_ʃ_ə_n]\
Definitions of CIRCULATION
- 2006 - WordNet 3.0
- 2011 - English Dictionary Database
- 2010 - New Age Dictionary Database
- 1913 - Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
- 1919 - The Winston Simplified Dictionary
- 1898 - Warner's pocket medical dictionary of today.
- 1894 - The Clarendon dictionary
- 1919 - The Concise Standard Dictionary of the English Language
- 1920 - A dictionary of scientific terms.
- 1846 - Medical lexicon: a dictionary of medical science
- 1898 - American pocket medical dictionary
- 1916 - Appleton's medical dictionary
- 1871 - The Cabinet Dictionary of the English Language
- 1790 - A Complete Dictionary of the English Language
Sort: Oldest first
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(library science) the count of books that are loaned by a library over a specified period
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free movement or passage through a series of vessels (as of water through pipes or sap through a plant)
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number of copies of a newspaper or magazine that are sold; "by increasing its circulation the newspaper hoped to increase its advertising"
By Princeton University
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(library science) the count of books that are loaned by a library over a specified period
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free movement or passage through a series of vessels (as of water through pipes or sap through a plant)
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number of copies of a newspaper or magazine that are sold; "by increasing its circulation the newspaper hoped to increase its advertising"
By DataStellar Co., Ltd
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The act of moving in a circle, or in a course which brings the moving body to the place where its motion began.
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The act of passing from place to place or person to person; free diffusion; transmission.
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Currency; circulating coin; notes, bills, etc., current for coin.
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The extent to which anything circulates or is circulated; the measure of diffusion; as, the circulation of a newspaper.
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The movement of the blood in the blood-vascular system, by which it is brought into close relations with almost every living elementary constituent. Also, the movement of the sap in the vessels and tissues of plants.
By Oddity Software
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The act of moving in a circle, or in a course which brings the moving body to the place where its motion began.
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The act of passing from place to place or person to person; free diffusion; transmission.
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Currency; circulating coin; notes, bills, etc., current for coin.
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The extent to which anything circulates or is circulated; the measure of diffusion; as, the circulation of a newspaper.
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The movement of the blood in the blood-vascular system, by which it is brought into close relations with almost every living elementary constituent. Also, the movement of the sap in the vessels and tissues of plants.
By Noah Webster.
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The act of moving around, or passing or sending from place to place; also, the extent to which a thing is distributed or sent; as, the magazine has a large circulation; the movement of the blood through the vessels of the body; current coin, notes, or bills.
By William Dodge Lewis, Edgar Arthur Singer
By William R. Warner
By William Hand Browne, Samuel Stehman Haldeman
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Transmission; dissemination; extent or amount of distribution; a current medium of exchange.
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Circulator.
By James Champlin Fernald
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The regular movement of any fluid within definite channels in the body; the streaming movement of the protoplasm of plant cells.
By Henderson, I. F.; Henderson, W. D.
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Physiologists give this name to the motion of the blood through the different vessels of the body-sanguimotion; - to that function, by which the blood, setting out from the left ventricle of the heart, is distributed to every part of the body by the arteries; -proceeds into the veins, returns to the heart, enters the right auricle, and passes into the corresponding ventricle, which sends it into the pulmonary artery to be distributed to the lungs, whence it issues by the pulmonary veins, and passes into the left auricle. From this it is sent into the left ventricle, and is again distributed by means of the arteries.
By Robley Dunglison
By Willam Alexander Newman Dorland
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Continuous motion, as of air; especially such motion in a definite circuit.
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The motion of the blood through the vessels of the animal body.
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The transit of blood through the vessels of any single tissue, region, or organ of the body. See subheadings.
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The movements in or through organic bodies of fluids or substances other than blood -e. g., the contents of the stomach, or the non-excrementitious elements of bile.
By Smith Ely Jelliffe
Word of the day
Proto Oncogene Proteins c erbB 2
- cell surface protein-tyrosine kinase that is found to be overexpressed in significant number adenocarcinomas. It has extensive homology can heterodimerize EGF EPIDERMAL GROWTH FACTOR), 3 receptor (RECEPTOR, 3) and the 4 receptor. Activation of erbB-2 receptor occurs during heterodimer formation with a ligand-bound erbB family members. EC 2.7.11.-.