enclose
verb /ɪnˈkləʊz/
  /ɪnˈkləʊz/
Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they enclose |    /ɪnˈkləʊz/   /ɪnˈkləʊz/  | 
| he / she / it encloses |    /ɪnˈkləʊzɪz/   /ɪnˈkləʊzɪz/  | 
| past simple enclosed |    /ɪnˈkləʊzd/   /ɪnˈkləʊzd/  | 
| past participle enclosed |    /ɪnˈkləʊzd/   /ɪnˈkləʊzd/  | 
| -ing form enclosing |    /ɪnˈkləʊzɪŋ/   /ɪnˈkləʊzɪŋ/  | 
- [usually passive] to build a wall, fence, etc. around something
- be enclosed (with something) The yard had been enclosed with iron railings.
 - be enclosed in something (figurative) All translated words should be enclosed in brackets.
 
Extra Examples- The ring is enclosed in a plastic case.
 - The garden was enclosed by a tall, black wooden fence.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- completely
 - fully
 - totally
 - …
 
- in
 - within
 
 - enclose something (especially of a wall, fence, etc.) to surround something
- Low hedges enclosed the flower beds.
 - (figurative) She felt his arms enclose her.
 
 - [usually passive] (in England in the past) to build a wall or fence around common (= public) land and make it private property
- be enclosed The land was enclosed in the seventeenth century.
 
 - 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.
 
 
Word OriginMiddle English (in the sense ‘shut in, imprison’): from Old French enclos, past participle of enclore, based on Latin includere ‘shut in’.