circumfuse
[ sur-kuh m-fyooz ]
/ ˌsɜr kəmˈfyuz /
verb (used with object), cir·cum·fused, cir·cum·fus·ing.
to pour around; diffuse.
to surround as with a fluid; suffuse: An atmosphere of joy circumfused the celebration.
Origin of circumfuse
OTHER WORDS FROM circumfuse
cir·cum·fu·sion [sur-kuh m-fyoo-zhuh n] /ˌsɜr kəmˈfyu ʒən/, nounWords nearby circumfuse
Example sentences from the Web for circumfuse
I almost think I could love him, whoever it be, on whom thou wouldst shed the rays that circumfuse thyself.
Zanoni |Edward Bulwer LyttonAs to the last, she did not think Frank had money enough yet to "circumfuse," she said, in that way.
Real Folks |Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney
British Dictionary definitions for circumfuse
circumfuse
/ (ˌsɜːkəmˈfjuːz) /
verb (tr)
to pour or spread (a liquid, powder, etc) around
to surround with a substance, such as a liquid
Derived forms of circumfuse
circumfusion (ˌsɜːkəmˈfjuːʒən), nounWord Origin for circumfuse
C16: from Latin
circumfūsus, from
circumfundere to pour around, from
circum- +
fundere to pour