Difference between Close and Incommunicative

What is the difference between Close and Incommunicative?

Close as an adjective is closed, shut. while Incommunicative as an adjective is uncommunicative.

Close

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: Closed, shut. At a little distance; near. Intimate; well-loved. hot, humid, with no wind.

Part of speech: verb

Definition: To obstruct (an opening). To move so that an opening is closed. To put an end to. To make (e.g. a gap) smaller. To have a vector sum of 0; that is, to form a closed polygon. To make a sale. To make the final outs, usually three, of a game. To terminate a computer program or a window or file thereof.

Part of speech: noun

Definition: An end of something. An enclosed field. A street that ends in a dead end. A very narrow alley between two buildings, often overhung by one of the buildings above the ground floor. A cathedral close.

Example sentence: Do not let where you come from define you, but never forget the values you learned from your close community.

Incommunicative

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: Uncommunicative.

We hope you now know whether to use Close or Incommunicative in your sentence.

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