full circle, come
full circle, come
Also, go full circle. Complete an entire cycle; return to the original position or condition. For example, After a whole year of debate we have come full circle on this issue. Shakespeare may have originated this expression in King Lear (5:3): "The wheel is come full circle." A 20th-century idiom with a similar meaning is what goes around comes around, as in I knew if I helped her now, she would help me later-what goes around comes around.
See also: come, full
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.
- full of years
- be full of beans
- glass
- seize the moment
- full up
- on a full stomach
- full to the brim
- full to the gills
- full hand
- full of hot air