You searched for: “including
include (verb), includes; included; including
1. To have within itself, to contain, to comprise: Joe's farm includes agricultural land, pastures, and a forest area.

Last evening, Monica and Jerry were dining out with a meal that included an appetizer, the main course, dessert, and coffee.

2. To put in a total, a class, or a group: Ted and his family were buying property for a price that is including the land, a house, and a big two-car garage.

Include can be used in an unrestrictive way implying that there might be other things that are not specifically mentioned or that there is more than what is listed.

3. Etymology: from Latin includere, "to enclose, to shut in"; from in-, "in, into" + claudere, "to shut, to close".
including (preposition)
Introducing one or more parts of a group or topic that was just indicated: "The job applicant was told that all he has to do is to fill in the details, including his name, address, telephone number, and the kind of job he wants to apply for."
Units related to: “including
(Greek: man, mankind; human beings; including, males (man, men; boy, boys) and females (woman, women; girl, girls); all members of the human race; people, humanity)
(Anglo Saxon or Teutonic: in Old English times, eye was eage, which is related to a whole range of words for "eye" in other European languages; including, Greek ophthalmos and Latin oculus [with all of its subsequent derivatives])
(Latin: thousand; a decimal prefix used in the international metric system for measurements; including, thousandth, thousandths)
(Greek: goddesses of fine arts; including, Calliope, Clio, Erato, Urania, Euterpe, Polyhymnia, Thalia, Melpomene, and Terpsichore)
(Latin: a vessel or vessels; including, tubes, ducts, or canals that convey and circulate fluids; such as, blood, lymph, or sap, through the bodies of animals or plants)
(Latin: to cut, geld, spay; to remove the testicles or ovaries of an animal, including humans)
(Greek > Latin: membrane lining the central canal of the spinal cord and the ventricles of the brain including cells and cellular membranes)
(Latin: mold, mushroom; any of a group of plants including mushrooms, molds, mildews, etc.)
(Latin: oculus used as a reference to "eye" to designate something that looks like or is suggestive of a person's organ of sight including potato "eyes")
(influences on humanity including those from the past and the present)
(Deep-sea animals have made attempts to light their cold and dark environments by carrying their own lights on their heads and on every other conceivable part of the bodies; including their eyes and tails and the insides of their mouths. The light they shed is living light.)
(Greek: said to be a stem for "all, every, whole", or "complete"; that is, a field of study in biology that refers to the whole set of omics including their -omics and -ome subfields in order to understand life as a holistic existence and organic beings as a whole)
(Latin: [diminutive of pupa, a young girl, doll or puppets] the pupil of the eye; including the larva of insects)
(the science of the living world; including the good and the bad)
(Greek > Latin: dried up, withered, mummy; the bony and some of the cartilaginous framework of the body of animals; including humans)
Word Entries at Get Words: “including
include (verb), includes; included; including

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(lists of words used in context from various printed media; including, statements that help readers determine how words function in various contents)
(scientific terms about the use of vehicles including cars, trucks, or any automobiles including their technology as related to transportation)
(a glossary of biological terms about living creatures including plants and all kinds of animal species and organisms)
(languages spoken by over 400 closely related groups in central, east-central, and southern Africa, belonging to the South Central subgroup of the Niger-Congo language family and including Swahili, Kinyarwanda, Kirundi, Zulu, Xhosa, etc.)
(ecology is the study of the relationship between organisms and the environments in which they live, including all living and nonliving components)
(a glossary, or dictionary, of terms used in geology; the science of the earth including its origin, composition, structure, and history)
(fashion terms including the invention of new words for items that apply specifically to men's fashions)
(topics about the study of the complex motions and interactions of the atmosphere, including the observation of phenomena; such as, temperature, density, winds, clouds, and precipitation)
(grammatical forms including: nouns, adjectives, adverbs, verbs, etc. that are used to identify word entries)
Word Entries at Get Words containing the term: “including
Scientific Terms Including a Variety of Topics
  1. Descriptioinary by Marc McCutcheon: Checkmark Books; An imprint of Facts On File, Inc.; New York; 2000.
  2. Encyclopedia of Science and Technology by James Trefil, Editor; Routledge; New York; 2001.
  3. How Things Work, Everyday Technology Explained by John Langone; National Geographic; Washington, D.C.; 2006.
  4. Inventions and Discoveries by Rodney Carlisle; Scientific American; John Wiley & Sons, Inc.; Hoboken, New Jersey; 2004.
  5. Random House Word Menu by Stephen Glazier; Random House Publishers; New York; 1992.
  6. Science Desk Reference; Scientific American; John Wiley & Sons, Inc.; New York; 1999.
  7. The Dictionary of Cultural Literacy by E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil; Houghton Mifflin Company; Boston, Massachusetts; 1988.
This entry is located in the following unit: Bibliography or Lists of Glossary-Term Sources (page 1)