follow+close

  • 21follow*/*/*/ — [ˈfɒləʊ] verb 1) [I/T] to walk, drive etc behind someone who is going in the same direction as you Ralph set off down the hill, and I followed.[/ex] I was convinced there was someone following me.[/ex] Jim opened the door and followed me down the …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • 22Close-packing of spheres — hcp and fcc close packing of spheres In geometry, close packing of spheres is a dense arrangement of equal spheres in an infinite, regular arrangement (or lattice). Carl Friedrich Gauss proved that the highest average density – that is, the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 23Close Combat III: The Russian Front — See also: Close Combat series Close Combat III: The Russian Front Cover art Developer(s) …

    Wikipedia

  • 24Close harmony — For other uses, see Close harmony (disambiguation). Close harmony on C triad.  Play …

    Wikipedia

  • 25close up — Synonyms and related words: approach, bang, bar, barricade, batten, batten down, block, block up, blockade, bolt, boom shot, button, button up, cap, carry to completion, cease, center, centralize, chock, choke, choke off, cicatrize, clap, clean… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 26follow — I Jamaican Slang Glossary To travel close to, to follow or seek. Follow back a mi. (Follow me.) Di fly a follow yu head. (The fly is seeking your head.) II Singlish (Singapore English) to come along/accompany Can I follow? …

    English dialects glossary

  • 27Follow My Heart — Infobox ESC entry song = flagicon|Poland Follow My Heart caption = year = 2006 country = Poland artist = Michał Wiśniewski, Anna Wiśniewska, Magdalena Pokora, Justyna Majkowska, Jacek Łągwa, Olaf Jeglitza as = Ich Troje Real McCoy with = language …

    Wikipedia

  • 28Close encounter of Cussac — The Close encounter of Cussac is the name given to an event which happened to a young brother and sister in Cussac, Cantal, France in August 1967. They reported a UFO sighting and encounter with alien beings. Contents 1 The testimony 2 The… …

    Wikipedia

  • 29close — [13] Close originally entered English as a verb. It came from clos , the past participial stem of Old French clore ‘shut’, which was a descendant of Latin claudere (related to Latin clāvis ‘key’, from which English gets clavier, clavichord,… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 30close the loop — v. phrase To follow up on and/or close out an area of discussion. Closely related to circle back around and loop in …

    Business English jargon and slang