closure

closure
noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin clausura, from clausus, past participle of claudere to close — more at close Date: 14th century 1. archaic means of enclosing ; enclosure 2. an act of closing ; the condition of being closed <
closure of the eyelids
>
<
business closures
>
3. something that closes <
pocket with zipper closure
>
4. [translation of French clôture] cloture 5. the property that a number system or a set has when it is mathematically closed under an operation 6. a set that consists of a given set together with all the limit points of that set 7. an often comforting or satisfying sense of finality <
victims needing closure
>
; also something (as a satisfying ending) that provides such a sense

New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.

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