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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
inclusive
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
fully
▪ The fully inclusive fare for the trip is £22, but it is regretted that persons under 16 years can not participate.
more
▪ Its liturgy director rewrites prayers and Scripture readings to make the language more inclusive.
▪ There are schools that work on developing a deeper and more inclusive sense of school spirit.
▪ The Catalina Foothills incorporation attempt was based on much broader and more inclusive support, but the same rules apply.
▪ They felt that colleges could be far more inclusive without becoming less intellectually serious.
■ NOUN
fitness
▪ To what extent its reproductive strategies emphasize such altruism depends on the pay-off of such strategies in terms of inclusive fitness.
▪ Those that increase inclusive fitness through behaviour facilitating reproduction by relatives are nepotistic.
▪ Both, however, exist to maximize the inclusive fitness of breeding in their exponents.
▪ All individuals are closely related and the behaviour probably maintains a high degree of inclusive fitness for all parties.
▪ Finally, the superego again acts as regulator over the tendency towards maximum inclusive fitness.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ At a cost of $25 per person per night inclusive, bed and breakfast accommodation is fairly cheap.
▪ Children aged 9 to 16 inclusive are welcome to enrol on the course.
▪ The inclusive cost of the car, complete with tax and insurance, is £9,800.
▪ The library will be closed from April to June inclusive.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As with the adoption of special needs children, the attitude of agency staff towards inclusive adoption can be crucial.
▪ Full-rate widows' pension is paid to widows between the ages of 55 and 59 inclusive.
▪ No doubt there will be would-be adopters who are likely to find the possibility of inclusive adoption threatening and not wish to proceed.
▪ Secondly, the inclusive approach may act as a positive encouragement to clients to make use of legal services.
▪ Summer School: All inclusive vacation courses start every week.
▪ They have special rates and inclusive hotel and self-catering holidays.
▪ They started out as a radically inclusive spiritual fellowship in which race and gender discrimination virtually disappeared.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Inclusive

Inclusive \In*clu"sive\, a. [Cf. F. inclusif.]

  1. Inclosing; encircling; surrounding.

    The inclusive verge Of golden metal that must round my brow.
    --Shak.

  2. Comprehending the stated limit or extremes; as, from Monday to Saturday inclusive, that is, taking in both Monday and Saturday; -- opposed to exclusive.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
inclusive

mid-15c., from Medieval Latin inclusivus, from Latin inclus-, past participle stem of includere (see include). Related: Inclusively; inclusiveness.

Wiktionary
inclusive

a. 1 including (almost) everything within its scope 2 including the extremes as well as the area between 3 (context linguistics English) of, or relating to the first-person plural pronoun when including the person being addressed

WordNet
inclusive

adj. including much or everything; and especially including stated limits; "an inclusive art form"; "an inclusive fee"; "his concept of history is modern and inclusive"; "from Monday to Friday inclusive" [ant: exclusive]

Wikipedia
Inclusive

Inclusive may refer to:

  • Inclusion (disambiguation)
  • inclusive disjunction, A or B or both
  • inclusive fitness, in evolutionary theory, how many kin are supported including non-descendants
  • inclusive interval (mathematics) includes its endpoints
  • clusivity, in linguistics, whether "we" includes "you"
  • inclusive tax rate includes taxes owed as part of the base
  • Inclusivism, a form of religious pluralism.

Usage examples of "inclusive".

MAJOR-GENERAL HALLECK: I think it very important for General Rosecrans to hold his position at or about Chattanooga, because if held from that place to Cleveland, both inclusive, it keeps all Tennessee clear of the enemy, and also breaks one of his most important railroad lines.

Or maybe the distinction between inclusive and exclusive forms is not upheld in the dual pronouns?

A restriction on the shipments to the Middle East and India from the United Kingdom and from the United States to not more than forty ships a month, if enforced from January to June 1943, inclusive, would improve the imports by 33,000,000 tons, thus avoiding the threatened breakdown and not making us live from hand to mouth, absolutely dependent on the fulfillment of American promises, in the last six months of the year.

Decades of dues and contributions and the proceeds from running for-profit conventions had secured its title to this piece of real estate out here in the Valley, and an inclusive policy had made it a commons for the various subgroups, specialized fandoms, Big Name Fans, book dealers, writers, wannabees, and hangers-on who made up the Los Angeles science fiction community.

As a result, all have taken some steps to make their governments more inclusive, to give their people a greater voice in policy making, and to ensure that then-policies are not too out of step with the sentiments of their populations.

His reward had been the discovery that one of the things the inclusive price included was wine and liqueurs with Christmas dinner.

Their thinking is, in fact, far less a discovery than a recognition, a remembering, a return and a homecoming to a remote, primordial, an inclusive houschold of the soul, out of which those concepts grew originall: philosophizing is to this extent a kind of atavism of the highest order.

And we would help create a new pluralist, inclusive political system that might not necessarily be a Western-style democracy but might be the first Arab-style democracy.

Bubba had been raised in a Presbyterian atmosphere of predestination, God's will, inclusive language, exegesis and colorful stoles.

Bob Coggan was sent home for his ill manners, and tranquility was restored by Jacob Smallbury, who volunteered a ballad as inclusive and interminable as that with which the worthy toper old Silenus amused on a similar occasion the swains Chromis and Mnasylus, and other jolly dogs of his day.

For fear of wild animals that hath been longest fostered in man, inclusive of the animal which he concealeth and feareth in himself:- Zarathustra calleth it 'the beast inside.

The working is greatly simplified by a process of elimination, based on such considerations as that certain multiplications produce a repetition of figures, and that the whole number cannot be from 12 to 23 inclusive, since in every such case sufficiently small denominators are not available for forming the fractional part.

On the other hand, the ending -lmë at one point denoted an inclusive "we": The party being addressed is included in "we".

The result is the nine consecutive composite numbers, 212 to 220 inclusive, with which we can form the required square.

By building a stable, inclusive new Iraqi political system coupled with a prosperous new economic system, the United States would demonstrate its commitment to the future of the Arab world.