(v. t.) To surround; to shut in; to confine on all sides; to include; to shut up; to encompass; as, to inclose a fort or an army with troops; to inclose a town with walls.
(v. t.) To put within a case, envelope, or the like; to fold (a thing) within another or into the same parcel; as, to inclose a letter or a bank note.
(v. t.) To separate from common grounds by a fence; as, to inclose lands.
(v. t.) To put into harness; to harness.
Example Sentences:
(1) Bacterial organisms, believed to be B bronchiseptica, were observed in the cytoplasm of osteoblasts and inclose proximity to bone surfaces in diseased pigs.
(2) In the remaining patients the antrum was most frequently inclosed.
(3) Macrophages, inclosing yellowish-brown pigments and erythrocytes, appeared in the lamina propria of the intestinal mucosa, mainly in the cecum.
(4) In over one third of the 248 patients the gastritis inclosed the entire mucosa.
(5) Both of groups C and D nearly inclose to each other, in body weight, indicating that imported meat were free from any estrogenic residues in comparison to our local meat.
Inclosed
Definition:
(imp. & p. p.) of Inclose
Example Sentences:
(1) Bacterial organisms, believed to be B bronchiseptica, were observed in the cytoplasm of osteoblasts and inclose proximity to bone surfaces in diseased pigs.
(2) In the remaining patients the antrum was most frequently inclosed.
(3) Macrophages, inclosing yellowish-brown pigments and erythrocytes, appeared in the lamina propria of the intestinal mucosa, mainly in the cecum.
(4) In over one third of the 248 patients the gastritis inclosed the entire mucosa.
(5) Both of groups C and D nearly inclose to each other, in body weight, indicating that imported meat were free from any estrogenic residues in comparison to our local meat.