Lewis & Short

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* circum-lūcens, entis, Part. [luceo], shining or glittering around; trop.: fortuna, Sen. Cons. ad Marc. 2, 5.

circum-lŭo, ĕre, v. a., to flow around or wash upon (rare): Rhenus tergum ac latera circumluit, Tac. H. 4, 12: pars arcis circumluitur mari, Liv. 25, 11, 1: litora subit et circumluit pelagus, Mel. prooem. 2: (Aegeum) mare laevā Imbrum et Tenedum circumluens, Amm. 22, 8, 2.

circum-lustro, āvi, 1, v. a.,

  1. I. to light all around; in tmesis: mundi templum, Lucr 5, 1437.
  2. II. Trop., to travel over or through: populos provinciae, Cod. Th. 4, 8, 5.

circum-lŭvĭo, ōnis, f.; and cir-cumlŭvĭum, ii, n. [luo], the accumulation of land by alluvion around a piece of land, alluvial land: jura circumluvionum, the right of using such land, Cic. de Or 1, 38, 173.
Form circumluvium, Paul. ex Fest. p. 64, 14 Müll., and Isid. Orig. 14, 8, 12.