The verb 'include' entered English around 1420 from Latin 'inclūdere' (to shut in, to enclose, to confine, to insert), a compound of the prefix 'in-' (in, into) and the verb 'claudere' (to shut, to close). The Proto-Indo-European root is *klāu- (hook, peg, crooked or forked branch), reflecting the ancient technology of closing doors and gates with hooks or pegs. The word thus carries within it a trace of the physical mechanics of closure — the hook that fastens a door shut — transformed through millennia of metaphorical extension into the abstract concept of inclusion.
The Latin verb 'claudere' is one of the most productive roots in the English vocabulary, generating a family of words united by the idea of closing: 'include' (close in), 'exclude' (close out), 'conclude' (close completely), 'preclude' (close before, prevent), 'seclude' (close apart), 'occlude' (close against), 'recluse' (one who has closed themselves away), 'clause' (a closing, a distinct proposition), 'close' (to shut), and 'enclose' (to shut within). This family demonstrates how a single physical action — shutting a door — can generate an entire vocabulary of abstract concepts.
The original English sense of 'include' was closer to the Latin: to shut something inside, to enclose physically. A fifteenth-century writer might speak of a garden 'included' by a wall, meaning surrounded and enclosed by it. This physical sense has largely given way to the abstract: to include someone in a list, a plan, a group, or a category is to metaphorically close them inside the boundaries of that set.
The noun 'inclusion' (from Latin 'inclūsiōnem') has become a keyword of modern social and political discourse. 'Inclusion' in education refers to the practice of integrating students with disabilities into mainstream classrooms. 'Diversity and inclusion' (D&I) has become a standard phrase in corporate and institutional language, describing efforts to ensure that organizations welcome people of all backgrounds. The political and moral weight of 'inclusion' reflects the power of its etymology: to be included is to be inside the circle; to be excluded
The adjective 'inclusive' has developed its own semantic range. 'Inclusive language' avoids terms that exclude or marginalize particular groups. 'Inclusive design' creates products and environments accessible to people of all abilities. In mathematics, 'inclusive' distinguishes ranges that include their endpoints (1 to 10 inclusive = 1, 2, 3...10) from those that exclude them. The commercial phrase 'all-inclusive' (a holiday package that includes all meals, drinks, and activities) literalizes the etymology: everything is shut inside the price.
The Latin past participle 'inclūsus' (shut in) survives in the English noun 'enclosure' and the rare adjective 'incluse.' In medieval Christian usage, an 'incluse' or 'recluse' was a person who had themselves literally walled into a cell attached to a church, choosing permanent physical enclosure as a form of religious devotion. The anchorite Julian of Norwich (c. 1343–c. 1416) was one such figure, producing her 'Revelations of Divine Love' from her enclosed cell.
Phonologically, 'include' follows the standard English pattern for Latin-derived verbs with stress on the second syllable (/ɪnˈkluːd/). The long vowel in the second syllable reflects the Latin long 'ū' in 'inclūdere,' which was maintained through Old French transmission. The word has been remarkably stable in both form and meaning since its adoption, though the shift from physical to abstract inclusion represents a significant semantic broadening that occurred gradually over several centuries.