CIRCUMFLEX, in Grammar, an accent serving to note, or distinguish, a syllable of an intermediate sound between acute and grave; and generally somewhat long.—The Greeks had three accents, the acute, the grave, and the circumflex; formed thus, ´, ˘, ˆ. In Latin, English, French, &c. the circumflex is made thus ˆ.—The acute raises the voice, and the grave falls or lowers it: the circumflex is a kind of undulation, or wavering of the voice, between the two. It is seldom used among the moderns, unless to show the omission of a letter which made the syllable long and open; a thing much more frequent in the French than among us: thus they write pâte for paste; tête for teste; flûmes for fumes, &c. They also use the circumflex in the participles; some of their authors writing conneu, peu, others connu, pû, &c. Father Buffier is at a loss for the reason of the circumflex on this occasion.
The form of the Greek circumflex was anciently the same with that of ours, viz. ˆ; being a composition of the other two accents ˆ in one.—But the copyists changing the form of the characters, and introducing the running hand, changed also the form of the circumflex accent; and instead of making a just angle, rounded it off, adding a dash, through too much haste; and thus formed an ˆ, laid horizontally, which produced this figure ˆ, instead of this ˆ.