Circumstantial vs Indirectly - What's the difference?
circumstantial | indirectly |
Pertaining to or dependent on circumstances, especially as opposed to essentials; incidental, not essential.
* Sharp
Abounding with circumstances; detailing or exhibiting all the circumstances; minute; particular.
* 1806 , )
* 2007 , John Burrow, A History of Histories , Penguin 2009, p. 326:
Full of circumstance or pomp; ceremonial.
(chiefly, in the plural) Something incidental to the main subject, but of less importance.
As an adjective circumstantial
is pertaining to or dependent on circumstances, especially as opposed to essentials; incidental, not essential.As a noun circumstantial
is something incidental to the main subject, but of less importance.As an adverb indirectly is
in an indirect manner.circumstantial
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- We must therefore distinguish between the essentials in religious worship and what is merely circumstantial .
- For although my information appears too direct and circumstantial to be fictitious, yet the magnitude of the enterprise, the desperation of the plan, and the stupendous consequences with which it seems pregnant, stagger my belief
- Second-hand but clearly from the best possible source - the King himself - [the story] is highly circumstantial , taking twenty-two pages of text.
Noun
(en noun)- the circumstantials of religion