an closed up room to it self
The prefix for "enclose" is "en-."
The past tense of enclose is enclosed.
Please enclose your tax-deductible donation in the self-stamped envelope provided. Soon the fog will enclose the entire coastline. Please enclose your payment with your tax return.
Enclosed is a verb. It's the past tense of enclose.
Oh, what a lovely word "enclose" is! It means to surround or close off something. Here's a sentence for you: "Please enclose your payment with the order form before mailing it out." Just like adding a happy little fence around your artwork to keep it safe and sound.
to enclose
Please enclose the documents in the envelope before mailing them.
Open Plan - Where all staff work in one large office. There are no partitions or segmented section that are enclose. Closed plan is where you have a large roof and it is partitioned off or has sub offices situated .
The proper grammar is "you have enclosed" when referring to something that has already been included. "You enclose" is present tense and would be used when requesting someone to include something.
to enclose in
release
One way is to enclose by agreement. The other way....im still working on that.