Who can stand for the first time upon the mountain rim that incloses this valley, and not have his thoughts carried back to some such scene as this?
A railing formed of plates of pure silver incloses both the choir and the altar of the Virgin.
The summit of this cone is about 500 feet in height, corresponding to that of the circular border which incloses the basin; so that it can be seen from the sea only through the ravine.
The inner beach incloses the still clear water of the lagoon, resting in its greater part on white sand, and when illuminated by a vertical sun, of a most vivid green.
This delta incloses one long, narrow sand terrace, continuous for 9 m.
Three concentric circles are nearly united to an adjoining one which incloses a group of five cairns, or what might be more accurately described as one gigantic cruciform cairn.
The external wall measures fourteen feet in thickness, and about eight feet in greatest height, and incloses an area of about thirty feet in diameter.
Inside is a white film which incloses a watery translucent pulp of a sweetish taste and a brownish black ovoid stone.
Its exterior consists of a pulpy substance of subacid flavor; its stone is large for the size of the fruit, and incloses a kernel of yellowish-white color and an oily, rather bitter flavor.
Almost every nodule of one especial layer near the top incloses its organism.
The vitrification of the rampart which on every side incloses the grassy area has been more variously, but less satisfactorily, accounted for than the green luxuriance within.
The eyes are globular and are encircled by the ends of a double loop of wire which extends along the back and incloses a line of minute balls or nodes.
The under side of the cup is divided into four compartments, each of which incloses a dragon painted in black and red on a white ground; the borders are sometimes red, sometimes purple.
Lace stitches are introduced in the medallion which incloses these letters, the outlines being worked in overcast and point de pois, the pens and initials in raised satin stitch, as also the flowers.
You look down on a world of foliage, and fruit, and blossoms, whose hue, by contrast with the barren mountains and the yellow rim of the desert which incloses it, seems brighter than all other gardens in the world.
Out of the gray ring of the city, whichincloses the mound, rise the great white domes and the whiter minarets of its numerous mosques, many of which are grand and imposing structures.
That which inclosesor fences in; a boundary; a limit; a fence; a palisade.
Most of them develop a mantle, whichincloses either a branchial or a pulmonary cavity.
Defn: A layer or mass of cellular tissue, especially that part of the thallus of certain fungi which incloses the perithecia.
A saclike involucre which incloses the young fruit in most hepatic mosses.
The outer layer loosely incloses the heart and the adherent inner layer, and is called the parietal pericardium.
Defn: The very thin transparent and apparently homogenous sheath which incloses a striated muscular fiber; the myolemma.
The front of that part of the head which incloses the brain; that part of the face above the eyes; the brow.
Mining) Defn: The mineral substance whichincloses a vein; a matrix; a gangue.
It hangs vertically in the water, and when its ends are brought together or drawn ashore incloses the fish.
Defn: A fold of the dura mater which separates the cerebellum from the cerebrum and often incloses a process or plate of the skull called the bony tentorium.
Defn: A type of orange in which the fruit incloses a small secondary fruit, the rind showing on the exterior a navel-like pit or depression at the apex.
This bubble by reason of its comparative levity to the fluidity that incloses it, would ascend to the top.
Especially: (a) The circular membrane that partiallyincloses the space beneath the umbrella of hydroid medusæ.
Defn: The double baglike fold of serous membrane which incloses the heart.
This breccia has a white calcareous basis, which incloses angular fragments of compact, yellowish-gray limestone, with smooth dull surfaces.
In these two genera, when the animal is extended, as in crawling about the sand, the mantle curves upward and incloses a large portion of the shell itself.
It will be seen that the mantle entirely incloses the animal at the back and sides, just as the cover of a book incloses the pages or printed portion.
The sun consists of a box with a cover of gelatine on which the sun is painted; a semicircular wooden arm incloses a reflector and supports six incandescent lamps set inwardly.
He takes a child and inclosesit in this basket, and around the latter buckles a belt.
It incloses the blood-vessels, lacteals, and nerves of the small intestine, together with its accessory glands.
Each papilla not only contains a minute vein and artery, but it alsoincloses a loop of sensitive nerves.
A bell-shaped cover inclosesthe conductors at the other end of the armature.
At the commutator end the cover is like a truncated cone, and incloses the connections completely.
Animals eat the fruit in its young green state; a sweet oily pulp incloses the seeds, and is collected and sold in the markets under the name of Pipa de Jagua.
These are ovate in shape, with a thick rind, which incloses a luscious pulp.
The occipital vertebra is the auditory vertebra; it incloses the auditory bones and the cerebellum, which gives off the nerves of hearing.
The skin, as branchia, incloses all, like the cellular membrane does the vessels.
As a cyst the internal wall incloses the nutritive matter, which originates from the mucus, and thus from the organic water.
As the root puts forth numerous branches, so the involucrum or spatha frequently incloses many blossoms that constitute the thyrsus or synthetic form of inflorescence.
The choroid coat incloses also an osseous mass, the lens--a vertebral body.
The apple is the calyx become sarcocarp, and as it usually incloses several carpels, it is therefore polycarpal and contains few seeds.
They have consequently only one seed-lobe, which also incloses only one plumule--Monocotyledones.
The temple is always concealed behind a pylon, whose summit rises above it while its two wings stretch beyond it laterally until they meet the rectangular wall which incloses the sanctuary.
The testicles of the males are shut up in the belly above the kidneys; the stomach is filled with somewhat of a thick humour, like that which incloses the amnios.
This frame with the rosette it incloses may be taken as giving some idea of the ceiling panels or coffers.
Its circumvallation incloses an almost exact square, the diagonals of which point to the north, south, east and west respectively.
The rectangles forming one of these patterns incloses three vertical feathers, with a triangle on the right side and a crook on the left.
The sides of the median triangles are formed of alternating black and white blocks, and the quadrate figure which it incloses is etched with a diagonal and cross.
A strong iron railingincloses it, except in front, where two o three steps lead to a platform at the foot of the column, whereon devout passers-by may kneel in prayer.
On the right is seen the fort, which incloses the magazine, in the center is the building occupied by the officers, on either side of which are the barracks of the soldiers.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "incloses" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.