Circuit means, at its core, 'a going around' — and it has never strayed far from that image. Latin circumire joined circum ('around') with ire ('to go'), and its past participle circuitus became a noun for a circular journey. The word entered English in the 14th century through Old French, initially describing the route travelled by itinerant judges who held court in a series of towns before returning to their starting point. This judicial sense persists in both British and American legal systems. The electrical meaning appeared in the 1740s when experimenters with Leyden jars noticed that current had to complete a loop — had to 'go around' — to flow. The metaphor was exact: just as a judge must return to London to complete the circuit, electrons must return to their source. Today the word spans motorsport (a racing circuit), electronics (a printed circuit board), and fitness (circuit training), but every use preserves the Latin promise that whatever goes out will come back around.