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close
verb
-
close
,
closing
,
closes
,
closed
to
shut
something
so
that
it
is
no
longer
open
•
She
closed
the
window
when
it
started
to
rain
.
She
closed
the
window
when
it
started
to
rain
.
•
Please
close
the
door
behind
you
so
the
heat
stays
in
.
Please
close
the
door
behind
you
so
the
heat
stays
in
.
adjective
-
close
,
closer
,
closest
near
in
distance
,
time
,
or
relationship
•
My
school
is
very
close
to
the
bus
stop
.
My
school
is
very
close
to
the
bus
stop
.
•
The
final
exam
is
close
,
so
I
need
to
study
.
The
final
exam
is
close
,
so
I
need
to
study
.
verb
-
close
,
closing
,
closes
,
closed
to
bring
something
to
an
end
or
to
stop
operating
•
The
museum
closes
at
six
o'clock
every
evening
.
The
museum
closes
at
six
o'clock
every
evening
.
•
The
ceremony
closed
with
a
beautiful
song
.
The
ceremony
closed
with
a
beautiful
song
.
adverb
-
close
,
closer
,
closest
near
in
space
;
not
far
away
•
Stand
close
so
you
will
fit
in
the
picture
.
Stand
close
so
you
will
fit
in
the
picture
.
•
The
cat
followed
close
behind
the
girl
.
The
cat
followed
close
behind
the
girl
.
adjective
-
close
,
closer
,
closest
near
in
distance
,
time
,
or
relationship
•
The
supermarket
is
very
close
,
so
we
can
walk
there
in
five
minutes
.
The
supermarket
is
very
close
,
so
we
can
walk
there
in
five
minutes
.
•
Emma
and
her
sister
are
close
and
talk
every
day
.
Emma
and
her
sister
are
close
and
talk
every
day
.
From
Middle
English
clos
,
from
Old
French
clos
“
shut
,
enclosed
,”
from
Latin
clausus
,
past
participle
of
claudere
“
to
shut
.”
verb
-
close
,
closing
,
closes
,
closed
to
shut
something
or
become
shut
•
Please
close
the
window
;
it's
getting
cold
.
Please
close
the
window
;
it's
getting
cold
.
•
The
store
closes
at
9
p
.
m
.
The
store
closes
at
9
p
.
m
.
Same
origin
as
adjective
sense
,
with
the
meaning
“
to
shut
”
developing
in
Middle
English
.
adjective
-
close
,
closer
,
closest
with
very
little
difference
;
decided
by
a
small
margin
•
It
was
a
close
game
,
but
our
team
won
by
one
point
.
It
was
a
close
game
,
but
our
team
won
by
one
point
.
•
The
election
results
were
close
all
night
.
The
election
results
were
close
all
night
.
verb
-
close
,
closing
,
closes
,
closed
to
bring
something
to
an
end
,
or
to
end
•
The
speaker
will
close
the
ceremony
with
a
song
.
The
speaker
will
close
the
ceremony
with
a
song
.
•
They
closed
the
meeting
after
everyone
agreed
on
the
plan
.
They
closed
the
meeting
after
everyone
agreed
on
the
plan
.
Sense
of
“
conclude
”
appears
in
15th-century
English
,
extending
the
idea
of
shutting
to
finishing
an
event
.
adverb
-
close
,
closer
,
closest
near
in
space
or
time
;
not
far
•
The
cat
was
sitting
close
behind
me
without
making
a
sound
.
The
cat
was
sitting
close
behind
me
without
making
a
sound
.
•
The
comet
passed
close
to
Earth
last
night
.
The
comet
passed
close
to
Earth
last
night
.
Adverbial
use
grew
from
the
adjective
form
in
Middle
English
,
retaining
the
idea
of
nearness
.
noun
the
end
or
conclusion
of
something
•
At
the
close
of
the
concert
,
the
audience
gave
a
standing
ovation
.
At
the
close
of
the
concert
,
the
audience
gave
a
standing
ovation
.
•
We
discussed
the
budget
near
the
close
of
the
meeting
.
We
discussed
the
budget
near
the
close
of
the
meeting
.
Noun
sense
recorded
since
the
14th
century
,
referring
to
the
act
of
shutting
and
later
to
the
ending
of
an
event
.
closed
verb
-
close
,
closing
,
closes
,
closed
past
tense
and
past
participle
of
close
•
She
closed
the
book
and
went
to
sleep
.
She
closed
the
book
and
went
to
sleep
.
•
The
bank
closed
early
because
of
the
holiday
.
The
bank
closed
early
because
of
the
holiday
.
disclose
verb
-
disclose
,
disclosing
,
discloses
,
disclosed
to
make
something
known
or
reveal
information
that
was
previously
secret
or
unknown
•
The
company
refused
to
disclose
the
details
of
the
deal
.
The
company
refused
to
disclose
the
details
of
the
deal
.
•
She
whispered
and
disclosed
her
secret
plan
to
her
best
friend
.
She
whispered
and
disclosed
her
secret
plan
to
her
best
friend
.
Late
Middle
English
:
from
Latin
‘
disclosus
’,
past
participle
of
‘
discludere
’
meaning
‘
to
unbolt
,
open
’.
verb
-
disclose
,
disclosing
,
discloses
,
disclosed
to
officially
publish
or
report
information
,
especially
financial
or
legal
facts
,
as
required
by
rules
or
law
•
Public
companies
are
required
to
disclose
their
earnings
every
quarter
.
Public
companies
are
required
to
disclose
their
earnings
every
quarter
.
•
The
bank
disclosed
its
exposure
to
foreign
debt
in
the
report
.
The
bank
disclosed
its
exposure
to
foreign
debt
in
the
report
.
Same
origin
as
the
general
sense
:
from
Latin
‘
discludere
’
meaning
‘
to
open
’.
It
became
a
legal
and
financial
term
in
the
19th
century
when
regulations
began
requiring
companies
to
reveal
information
to
the
public
.