Similar words: circulate, speculation, calculation, matriculation, circumlocution, population, regulation, tribulation. Meaning: [‚sɜːkjʊ'leɪʃn] n. 1. the dissemination of copies of periodicals (as newspapers or magazines) 2. movement through a circuit; especially the movement of blood through the heart and blood vessels 3. (library science) the count of books that are loaned by a library over a specified period 4. number of copies of a newspaper or magazine that are sold 5. free movement or passage through a series of vessels (as of water through pipes or sap through a plant) 6. the spread or transmission of something (as news or money) to a wider group or area.
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121. The rocking also helps with blood circulation and bowel movement and with preventing calcium deposits and stones.
122. The Treaty of Rome meanwhile guarantees free circulation of goods.
123. This plant, he explained, cured stomach pains and promoted circulation of the blood.
124. If the hepatic capacity to eliminate portal endotoxins is exceeded, spillover into the systemic circulation will occur.
125. I hope that that campaign, which continues until 19 January, succeeds in taking substantial numbers of weapons out of circulation.
126. Evening and weekly papers faced the stiffest competition at the fringes of their circulation areas.
127. Its circulation soared above 100,000 a day, outstripping the state-owned Herald, which has become a government mouthpiece.
128. This contact creates a pumping action which stimulates correct blood circulation in the foot.
129. There may be a trade-off between price maximisation and restricting the circulation of the information memorandum.
130. Mainstream publishers complain that good circulation databases of black names are hard to come by.
131. In quest of mass circulation and advertising support,[sentencedict.com] the major city newspapers gradually developed a tradition of political and journalistic independence.
132. The improved blood circulation enables practitioners to perform tasks in a more vigorous and healthy manner.
133. A possible list of management information, showing frequency and circulation, is given overleaf.
134. As a result circulation has fallen by half, and big advertisers have drifted away.
135. Crime we know about and talk about and deplore, but sin as a subject for discussion has gone out of circulation.
136. Its circulation is about 500, 000, and the average age of its readers is 30. 5.
137. This mechanism might facilitate bile salt absorption into the enterohepatic circulation by slowing intestinal transit time.
138. Of the dailies, Today's circulation has registered the worst seasonal drop, falling to 466,631 from 513[Sentencedict.com ],673.
139. Combined, Patuxent publications have an average circulation of more than 250, 000 a week.
140. They have been allowed, however, to publish their own newsletters and bulletins, but their circulation has been strictly limited.
141. With the much lower production costs of the late 1980s, small circulation was no longer the same barrier to profitability.
142. Consumer goods occupy a much more contradictory place in the circulation and realisation of capital than do fixed assets.
143. Most readers won't realise just how wide a circulation Environmental Issues has.
144. But the second Annales generation added nothing essential to the lot of ideas put into circulation by the first.
145. Nevertheless it was felt that the papers deserved a wider circulation because of their intrinsic interest to a larger audience.
146. When it won its next large majority in 1966, the circulation gap had narrowed to 13 points.
147. Unlike the mornings, the number of titles remained much the same, but total circulation fell.
148. The Sun switched back to the Tories in 1979, and the circulation gap doubled.
149. Dry body brushing stimulates circulation and shifts pollutants to the kidneys for elimination.
150. But giving up will immediately reduce the risk of heart disease, and circulation problems can improve within just weeks.
More similar words: circulate, speculation, calculation, matriculation, circumlocution, population, regulation, tribulation, capitulation, accumulation, congratulations, circuit, circuitous, circumspect, circumstance, circumstantial, relation, culmination, isolation, inflation, violation, collation, revelation, immolation, desolation, exhalation, acculturation, translation, correlation, installation.