| 释义 | se·clude \sə̇ˈklüd, sēˈ-\ transitive verb
 (-ed/-ing/-s)
 Etymology: Middle English secluden to keep away, forbid to enter, from Latin secludere to confine, separate, seclude, from sed-, se- apart (from sed, se without) + -cludere (from claudere to shut, close) — more at idiot, close
 1.
 a.  : to shut up apart : confine in a place hard to reach or enter : make inaccessible : secrete, hide
 b.  : to remove or separate (oneself or another) from intercourse or outside influence : withdraw into solitude : isolate
 < was accused … of an intention to seclude himself in magnificent isolation — Robert Grant †1940 >
 2. obsolete
 a.  : to exclude or debar from a privilege, rank, or dignity : expel or bar from a membership or office
 < 22 of the old secluded members having been at the House door the last week to demand entrance — Samuel Pepys >
 b.  : to exclude from consideration
 c.  : to keep out from a place or society
 3.  : to shut off : protect, screen
 < a secluded spot frequented by those interested in fishing and tramping — American Guide Series: New Hampshire >
 4. obsolete  : to separate by or as if by a barrier : keep apart or distinct
 < nothing but clergy could us two seclude — Andrew Marvell >
 |