Evidently, a space that is locally simply connected is semi-locally simply connected. An example of a space that is not semi-locally simply connected is the Hawaiian earring: the union of the circles in the Euclidean plane with centers (1/n, 0) and radii 1/n, for n a natural number. Give this space the subspace topology. Then all neighborhoods of the origin contain circles that are not nullhomotopic.
The property of semi-locally simple connectivity is weaker than that of local simple connectivity. To see this, consider the cone on the Hawaiian earring. It is contractible and therefore semi-locally simply connected, but it is clearly not locally simply connected.
In contrast, the same set endowed with the CW topology is just a bouquet of countably many circles and (as any CW complex) it is semilocaly simplyconnected.
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This is version 13 of example of a space that is not semilocallysimplyconnected, born on 2003-02-04, modified 2006-06-06.