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You're listening to Joanna
She has an American accent.
NGSL Rank: 518
round
raʊnd
Meanings
adjective
- shaped like a circle or cylinder.E.g. she was seated at a small, round table
- shaped like a sphere.E.g. a round glass ball
- (of a voice) rich and mellow; not harsh.E.g. his rich, round voice went down well with the listeners
- (of a number) expressed in convenient units rather than exactly, for example to the nearest whole number or multiple of ten.E.g. the size of the fleet is given in round numbers
- not omitting or disguising anything; frank.E.g. she berated him in good round terms
noun
- a circular piece of something.E.g. cut the pastry into rounds
- an act of visiting a number of people or places in turn.E.g. she did the rounds of her family to say goodbye
- each of a sequence of sessions in a process, typically characterized by development between one session and another.E.g. the two sides held three rounds of talks
- a regularly recurring sequence of activities.E.g. their lives were a daily round of housework and laundry
- a song for three or more unaccompanied voices or parts, each singing the same theme but starting one after another, at the same pitch or in octaves; a simple canon.
- a slice of bread.E.g. two rounds of toast
- the amount of ammunition needed to fire one shot.E.g. the gun can fire 30 rounds a second
adverb
- so as to rotate or cause rotation; with circular motion.E.g. a plane circled round overhead
- so as to rotate and face in the opposite direction.E.g. he swung round to face her
- so as to surround someone or something.E.g. everyone crowded round
- so as to reach a new place or position, typically by moving to the other side of something.E.g. he made his way round to the back of the building
- used to suggest idle and purposeless motion or activity.E.g. he was driving round aimlessly
- so as to give support and companionship.E.g. if one girl is distraught the others will rally round
preposition
- on every side of (a focal point).E.g. the area round the school
- so as to encircle (someone or something).E.g. he wrapped the blanket round him
- following an approximately circular route past (a corner or obstacle).E.g. a bus appeared round the corner
- so as to cover or take in the whole area of (a place).E.g. she went round the house and saw that all the windows were barred
verb
- pass and go round (something) so as to move on in a changed direction.E.g. the ship rounded the cape and sailed north
- alter (a number) to one less exact but more convenient for calculations.E.g. we'll round the weight up to the nearest kilo
- give a round shape to.E.g. a lathe that rounded chair legs
Practise saying this word
round
Joanna
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