The noun 'circumlocution' entered English in the mid-fifteenth century from Latin 'circumlocūtiō' (a speaking around, a roundabout expression), a compound of 'circum' (around) and 'locūtiō' (a speaking, a way of speaking, a phrase), the latter derived from 'locūtus,' the past participle of 'loquī' (to speak), which traces to Proto-Indo-European *tolkʷ- (to speak). The etymology is perfectly literal: circumlocution is speech that goes around its subject rather than through it.
In classical rhetoric, circumlocution was recognized as a figure of speech — 'periphrasis' in Greek — and was not always considered a fault. Quintilian discussed it as a technique that could serve several purposes: avoiding obscenity by naming indelicate things indirectly, creating poetic elevation by replacing plain words with elaborate descriptions, or generating suspense by delaying the naming of a thing. Homer's epithet-heavy style — 'the wine-dark sea,' 'the rosy-fingered dawn' — is a form of poetic circumlocution that enriches the text. The question
The negative sense — circumlocution as verbal evasion — has dominated in English since at least the sixteenth century. Political speech is frequently accused of circumlocution: instead of saying 'people were killed,' officials say 'there were casualties in the engagement.' Instead of 'we failed,' organizations announce 'the expected outcomes were not fully realized.' George Orwell's essay 'Politics and the English Language' (1946) is largely
Charles Dickens made circumlocution immortal in fiction. In 'Little Dorrit' (1857), the Circumlocution Office is a government department whose sole function is to prevent anything from being done. Every inquiry is met with forms to fill, offices to visit, and officials to consult, each of whom redirects the petitioner to another department. The Circumlocution Office is staffed by the Barnacle family, whose members have perfected the art of saying 'How Not To Do It' in every possible variation. Dickens was satirizing the
In linguistics, circumlocution has a more neutral, technical meaning. When a speaker lacks a word — whether because of a vocabulary gap, a speech disorder, or the absence of a direct equivalent in the target language — they use circumlocution to convey the meaning indirectly. A language learner who does not know the word 'screwdriver' might say 'the tool you use to turn screws.' A person with aphasia who cannot retrieve the word 'watch' might say 'the thing on my wrist that tells the time.' In these contexts, circumlocution is
The 'circum-' prefix (around) appears in many English words: 'circumnavigate' (to sail around), 'circumscribe' (to draw around, to limit), 'circumvent' (to go around, to evade), 'circumstance' (that which stands around), 'circumference' (the carrying around, the boundary of a circle). Each word preserves the idea of encircling, surrounding, or going around something. In 'circumlocution,' the thing being circled is the point — the direct statement that the speaker either cannot or will not make.
The related word 'locution' — a word, phrase, or manner of speaking — preserves 'loquī' without a prefix. 'Elocution' adds 'ē-' (out) for speech that goes outward. 'Interlocution' adds 'inter-' (between) for speech exchanged between people. 'Circumlocution' adds 'circum-' (around) for speech that orbits its subject. Together, these words form a complete map of what speech can
The persistence of circumlocution in language — despite centuries of criticism from rhetoricians, satirists, and style guides — suggests that it serves deep social functions. Indirectness can express politeness, soften disagreement, manage face, and navigate power dynamics. Many languages and cultures value indirect communication as a form of respect. Japanese, for instance, routinely uses circumlocution where English might use blunt