Full circle イディオム
come full circle
arrive at the place where you began """Let's ask the teacher, okay?"""
Full circle
When something has come full circle, it has ended up where it started.
go full circle
to go the whole distance and arrive back in the same place: "The company has now gone full circle and has returned to its original core products."
come full circle|circle|come|full circle
v. phr.,
informal 1. To become totally opposed to one's own earlier conviction on a given subject.
Today's conservative businessperson has come full circle from former radical student days. 2. To change and develop, only to end up where one started.
From modern permissiveness, ideas about child raising have come full circle to the views of our grandparents.
full circle, come
full circle, come Also,
go full circle. Complete an entire cycle; return to the original position or condition. For example,
After a whole year of debate we have come full circle on this issue. Shakespeare may have originated this expression in
King Lear (5:3): “The wheel is come full circle.” A 20th-century idiom with a similar meaning is
what goes around comes around, as in
I knew if I helped her now, she would help me later—what goes around comes around.full circle
Back to an aboriginal accompaniment or position. Often acclimated in the byword "come/go abounding circle." I started out as an accomplished student, and now that my grades are starting to advance again, I feel like I've appear abounding circle. The college's acceptance has been down in contempo years, but we are bent to go abounding amphitheater and restore the academy to its above glory.Learn more: circle, fullfull circle, come/go
The aeon is completed. This expression, apparently originated by Shakespeare in King Lear (“The caster is appear abounding circle,” 5.3), has been acclimated anytime back to call a bearings in which contest run their advance and things end abundant as they began.Learn more: come, full, go