Support Village Voice News With a Donation of Your Choice.
WORD OF THE DAY: CIRCUMSPECT
adjective | SER-kum-spekt
What It Means
Someone described as circumspect is careful to consider all circumstances and risks before doing or saying something.
// They are circumspect in all their business dealings.
Examples of CIRCUMSPECT
“As a narrator, [Martin] Baron is at once circumspect—his memoir reveals nearly nothing of his life outside the newsroom—and brimming with astringent disclosure.” — Nathan Heller, The New Yorker, 21 Nov. 2023
Did You Know?
Circumspect may not be the most common of words, but its Latin forebears have made quite a mark on our language. That’s because circumspect combines two major players in the Latin branch of the English language’s pedigree: circum-, meaning “around,” and specere, meaning “to look.” Just look around, and you’ll find that English is brimming with descendants of these Latin gems. Open your paper dictionary to circumspect and behold with your own eyes the thirty circum- entries that surround it, such as circumference, circumscribe, and circumnavigate. Then flip on over to spectacular for a little peek at the many words for which English has specere to thank, including spectacle, spectrum, and spectator. Latin lovers: we see you!
Merriam-Webster Dictionary