Cir`cum*stan"ti*ate (?), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Circumstantiated (?); p. pr. & vb. n. Circumstantiating (?).] [See Circumstantiating ().]
1.
To place in particular circumstances; to invest with particular accidents or adjuncts.
[R.]
If the act were otherwise circumstantiated, it might will that freely which now it wills reluctantly.
Bramhall.
2.
To prove or confirm by circumstances; to entr into details concerning.
Neither will time permint to circumstantiate these particulars, which I have only touched in the general.
State Trials (1661).
© Webster 1913.