Circa

Circa (from Latin, meaning 'around, about, roughly, approximately')  frequently abbreviated ca. or c. and less frequently circ., cca. or cc.  signifies "approximately" in several European languages and is used as a loanword in English, usually in reference to a date.[1] Circa is widely used in historical writing when the dates of events are not accurately known.

When used in date ranges, circa is applied before each approximate date, while dates without circa immediately preceding them are generally assumed to be known with certainty.

Examples

  • 1732–1799: Both years are known precisely.
  • c. 1732 – 1799: The beginning year is approximate; the end year is known precisely.
  • 1732 – c. 1799: The beginning year is known precisely; the end year is approximate.
  • c. 1732 – c. 1799: Both years are approximate.
gollark: I'd support making them rarer than golds as an experiment.
gollark: Why brimstones? To make people collect brimstones.
gollark: It should be given to brimstones.
gollark: I just incubate everything. EVERYTHING.
gollark: I want to have too many hatchlings. Much better than too few.

See also

References

  1. "circa". Dictionary.com. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  • Media related to Circa at Wikimedia Commons
  • The dictionary definition of circa at Wiktionary
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