seclude
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Seclude — Se*clude, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Secluded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Secluding}.] [L. secludere, seclusum; pref. se aside + claudere to shut. See {Close}, v. t.] 1. To shut up apart from others; to withdraw into, or place in, solitude; to separate from… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
seclude — I verb banish, blockade, bury, conceal, confine, cover, cut off, deport, disassociate, dissociate, embargo, exclude, excommunicate, exile, expatriate, hide, imprison, insulate, isolate, keep apart, keep in detention, keep in private, keep out,… … Law dictionary
seclude — (v.) mid 15c., to shut up, enclose, confine, from L. secludere shut off, confine, from se apart (see SECRET (Cf. secret)) + cludere, variant of claudere to shut (see CLOSE (Cf. close) (v.)). Meaning to remove or guard from public view is recorded … Etymology dictionary
seclude — *isolate, segregate, insulate, sequester Analogous words: *enclose, envelop, fence, pen, cage, wall: confine, circumscribe, *limit, restrict … New Dictionary of Synonyms
seclude — [v] isolate, hide blockade, boycott, cloister, closet, conceal, confine, cover, embargo, enclose, evict, immure, ostracize, quarantine, retire, screen, segregate, separate, sequester, shut off, withdraw; concepts 121,135,188 Ant. join, mingle,… … New thesaurus
seclude — ► VERB ▪ keep (someone) away from other people. ORIGIN Latin secludere, from claudere to shut … English terms dictionary
seclude — [si klo͞od′] vt. secluded, secluding [ME secluden < L secludere < se , apart (see SECEDE) + claudere, to CLOSE2] 1. to keep away or apart from others; bar or shut off from the view of or relations with others; isolate 2. to make private or… … English World dictionary
seclude — UK [sɪˈkluːd] / US [sɪˈklud] verb [transitive] Word forms seclude : present tense I/you/we/they seclude he/she/it secludes present participle secluding past tense secluded past participle secluded formal to keep someone apart from other people … English dictionary
seclude — transitive verb (secluded; secluding) Etymology: Middle English, to cut off (from), from Latin secludere to separate, seclude, from se apart + claudere to close more at secede, close Date: circa 1533 1. obsolete to exclude from a privilege, rank … New Collegiate Dictionary
seclude — v. (D; refl., tr.) to seclude from * * * [sɪ kluːd] (D;refl.,tr.) to secludefrom … Combinatory dictionary