closed
Americanadjective
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having or forming a boundary or barrier.
He was blocked by a closed door.
The house had a closed porch.
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brought to a close; concluded.
It was a closed incident with no repercussions.
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not public; restricted; exclusive.
a closed meeting;
a closed bid at a private auction.
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not open to new ideas or arguments.
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self-contained; independent or self-sufficient.
a closed, symbiotic relationship.
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Phonetics. (of a syllable) ending with a consonant or a consonant cluster, as has, hasp.
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Linguistics. (of a class of items) limited in membership and not readily expanded to include new items, as the class of inflectional affixes, articles, pronouns, or auxiliaries (open, ).
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Hunting, Angling. restricted as to the kind of game that may be legally taken and as to where or when it may be taken.
woods closed to deer hunters.
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Mathematics.
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(of a set in which a combining operation between members of the set is defined) such that performing the operation between members of the set produces a member of the set, as multiplication in the set of integers.
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(of an interval) containing both of its endpoints.
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(of a map from one topological space to another) having the property that the image of a closed set is a closed set.
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(of a curve) not having endpoints; enclosing an area.
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(of a surface) enclosing a volume.
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(of a function or operator) having as its graph a closed set.
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adjective
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blocked against entry; shut
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restricted; exclusive
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not open to question or debate
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(of a hunting season, etc) close
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maths
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(of a curve or surface) completely enclosing an area or volume
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(of a set) having members that can be produced by a specific operation on other members of the same set
the integers are a closed set under multiplication
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Also: checked. phonetics
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denoting a syllable that ends in a consonant
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another word for close 1
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not open to public entry or membership
the closed society of publishing
Other Word Forms
- half-closed adjective
- semiclosed adjective
- well-closed adjective
Etymology
Origin of closed
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
Gold prices rose above $4,500 a troy ounce Tuesday and closed just below the milestone at another record.
But in 2018, China closed its doors to foreign garbage, so U.S. exporters began dumping their waste in smaller southeast Asian countries, including Malaysia and Vietnam.
From Los Angeles Times
It adds that services across the province are on the brink of collapse, as "health centres have been looted, medicines are unavailable, and schools remain closed".
From BBC
About a week later, the stock closed Dec. 10 at the lowest price — $61.24 — since Jan. 29, before recovering slightly.
From MarketWatch
The result is a market where foreign brands are no longer losing because China is “closed” but because it has become intensely competitive — and unforgiving to those that fail to adapt.
From MarketWatch
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.