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  1. CLOSE definition: 1. to change from being open to not being open, or to cause something to do this: 2. When a shop…. Learn more.

  2. 1. a. : to move so as to bar passage through something. Close the gate. b. : to block against entry or passage. close a street. : to deny access to. The city closed the beach. d. : to suspend or stop the operations of. close school. often used with down. They closed down the factory. e. : screen, exclude. close a view.

  3. To close is to shut something or to end something. You could close a door, close your mouth, or even close a deal.

  4. If something is close or comes close to something else, it almost is, does, or experiences that thing. There is a simplicity about the interior which comes close to blandness. An airliner came close to disaster while approaching Heathrow Airport.

  5. 1. to put or be put in such a position as to cover an opening; shut: the door closed behind him. 2. ( tr) to bar, obstruct, or fill up (an entrance, a hole, etc): to close a road. 3. (Medicine) to bring the parts or edges of (a wound, etc) together or (of the edges of a wound, etc) to be brought together.

  6. Close definition: to put (something) in a position to obstruct an entrance, opening, etc.; shut. See examples of CLOSE used in a sentence.

  7. Close Definition. klōs. closed, closer, closes, closest, closing. Meanings. Synonyms. Sentences. Definition Source. Word Forms. Origin. Adjective. Verb. Noun. Idiom. Filter. adjective. closer, closest. Being near in relationship. Close relatives. American Heritage. Shut away from observation; hidden; secluded. Webster's New World. Shut; not open.

  8. CLOSE definition: 1. If something closes, it moves so that it is not open, and if you close something, you make it…. Learn more.

  9. If you are close to something or if it is close, it is likely to happen or come soon. If you are close to doing something, you are likely to do it soon. She sounded close to tears.

  10. Jun 14, 2024 · close (plural closes) (now rare, chiefly Yorkshire) An enclosed field, especially a field enclosed around a (usually religious) building. (chiefly British) A street that ends in a dead end. ( Scotland) A very narrow alley between two buildings, often overhung by one of the buildings above the ground floor.