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    En·close
    /inˈklōz/

    verb

    • 1. surround or close off on all sides: "the entire estate was enclosed with walls" Similar surroundcircleringencompass
    • 2. place (something) in an envelope together with a letter: "I enclose a copy of the job description" Similar includeinsertput inenfold
  2. ENCLOSE meaning: 1. to surround something: 2. to send something in the same envelope or parcel as something else…. Learn more.

  3. To enclose something is to surround it or cover it up. An envelope encloses a letter. To enclose is to put something inside something else. A crowd of people could enclose a celebrity, or a wall might enclose a garden.

  4. 3 days ago · 4 meanings: 1. to close; hem in; surround 2. to surround (land) with or as if with a fence 3. to put in an envelope or wrapper,.... Click for more definitions.

  5. Definition of enclose verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  6. 1. to close; hem in; surround. 2. to surround (land) with or as if with a fence. 3. to put in an envelope or wrapper, esp together with a letter. 4. to contain or hold. enˈclosable, inˈclosable adj. enˈcloser, inˈcloser n.

  7. enclose something (with something) to put something in the same envelope, package, etc. as something else Please return the completed form, enclosing a recent photograph. See enclose in the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Check pronunciation: enclose.

  8. Definitions of 'enclose' 1. If a place or object is enclosed by something, the place or object is inside that thing or completely surrounded by it. [...] 2. If you enclose something with a letter, you put it in the same envelope as the letter. [...] Conjugations of 'enclose' present simple: I enclose, you enclose [...]