#FamilyIsEverything MAGA Proud Navy Dad They are all Fooked
nice trap !
Within touching distance...
enclose; 3rd person present: encloses; past tense: enclosed; past participle: enclosed; gerund or present participle: enclosing; verb: inclose; 3rd person present: incloses; past tense: inclosed; past participle: inclosed; gerund or present participle: inclosing; verb: in-close; 3rd person present: in-closes; past tense: in-closed; past participle: in-closed; gerund or present participle: in-closing
1.
surround or close off on all sides.
"the entire estate was enclosed with walls"
surround
circle
ring
From Middle English enclosen, inclosen, from Middle English enclos, from Old French enclose, feminine plural past participle of enclore, from Vulgar Latin *inclaudō, *inclaudere, from Latin inclūdō (doublet of include), from in- (“in”) + claudō (“to shut”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kleh₂u- (“key, hook, nail”). Equivalent to en- + close.
include (third-person singular simple present includes, present participle including, simple past and past participle included)
clue (plural clues)
(now rare) A strand of yarn etc. as used to guide one through a labyrinth; something which points the way, a guide.
Information which may lead one to a certain point or conclusion.
Give me a clue because the question is too vague.
An object or a kind of indication which may be used as evidence.
The decetives were looking for some clues at the scene of the crime.
Insight or understanding ("to have a clue [about]" or "to have clue". See have a clue, clue stick)
I had little clue that I was being carefully monitored by the CCTV.
Synonyms
(information which may lead one to a certain point or conclusion): hint, indication, suggestion
(object or indication which may be used as evidence): signature
(understanding): idea
late Middle English (in idea (sense)): via Latin from Greek idea ‘form, pattern’, from the base of idein ‘to see’.