closure
1Closure — may refer to: Closure (container) used to seal a bottle, jug, jar, can, or other container Closure (wine bottle), a stopper Closure (business), the process by which an organization ceases operations Closure (philosophy), a principle in… …
2closure — closure, social closure Identified in the writings of Max Weber , and more recently resurrected by the British sociologist Frank Parkin, the concept emerged as an alternative to Marxist theories of inequality and of how the latter is generated,… …
3closure — clo‧sure [ˈkləʊʒə ǁ ˈkloʊʒər] noun [countable] the act of closing a factory, store, organization etc permanently: • The factory faces closure if no more money can be found. • The company s 50 high street stores are currently threatened with… …
4Closure — Видеоаль …
5Closure — Clo sure (kl[=o] zh[ u]r; 135), n. [Of. closure, L. clausura, fr. clauedere to shut. See {Close}, v. t.] 1. The act of shutting; a closing; as, the closure of a chink. [1913 Webster] 2. That which closes or shuts; that by which separate parts are …
6Closure EP — Closure Compilation album by Everclear Released November 2, 2004 …
7closure — late 14c., a barrier, a fence, from O.Fr. closure enclosure; that which encloses, fastening, hedge, wall, fence, also closture barrier, division; enclosure, hedge, fence, wall (12c., Mod.Fr. clôture), from L. clausura lock, fortress, a closing… …
8closure — [n1] conclusion cease, cessation, close, closing, desistance, end, ending, finish, stop, stoppage, termination; concept 119 Ant. beginning, introduction, opening, start closure [n2] plug, seal blockade, bolt, bung, cap, cork, fastener, latch, lid …
9closure — index cessation (termination), close (conclusion), cloture, conclusion (outcome), denouement, end …
10closure — ► NOUN 1) an act or process of closing. 2) a device that closes or seals. 3) (in a legislative assembly) a procedure for ending a debate and taking a vote. ORIGIN Latin clausura, from claudere to close …