The verb 'occlude' entered English in 1597 from Latin 'occlūdere' (to close up, to shut up, to shut against), a compound of the prefix 'ob-' (against, in the way of — assimilated to 'oc-' before the consonant 'c') and 'claudere' (to shut, to close). The Proto-Indo-European root is *klāu- (hook, peg). The prefix 'ob-' adds a crucial semantic dimension: where 'claudere' alone means to close, 'occlūdere' means to close against something — to obstruct, to block, to shut in opposition to something that would otherwise pass through.
The word remains relatively technical in English, appearing primarily in scientific, medical, and dental contexts rather than in everyday speech. This contrasts with its 'claudere' siblings 'include,' 'exclude,' and 'conclude,' which have fully entered the common vocabulary. 'Occlude' retains the specialized, formal character of Latin technical vocabulary.
In medicine, 'occlusion' is a critical concept. An 'occlusion' of a blood vessel (arterial occlusion) occurs when the vessel is blocked, restricting or stopping blood flow. Coronary artery occlusion — the blockage of arteries supplying the heart — is the proximate cause of most heart attacks. The medical term captures the Latin etymology precisely: the artery is closed
In dentistry, 'occlusion' refers to the way the upper and lower teeth come together when the jaw closes. 'Malocclusion' (bad occlusion) describes any misalignment of the teeth — overbite, underbite, crossbite, or crowding. Orthodontic treatment aims to correct malocclusion, bringing the teeth into proper 'occlusion' — proper closing. The dental sense preserves the most literal meaning of the Latin: the jaw closes, and the teeth close against each other.
In meteorology, an 'occluded front' (or 'occlusion') is a weather phenomenon that occurs when a cold front overtakes a warm front, lifting the warm air mass entirely off the ground. The warm air is literally shut away from the surface — occluded, closed against the earth by the cold air wedging underneath it. Occluded fronts typically bring prolonged periods of cloud and rain, as the lifted warm air cools and releases its moisture. The term was introduced
In chemistry, 'occlude' has a specific meaning: to absorb or adsorb a gas within the structure of a solid. Palladium, for example, occludes hydrogen — the metal absorbs hydrogen gas into its crystal lattice, closing it within the solid structure. This chemical sense, dating from the nineteenth century, uses 'occlude' in a way closer to 'include' (to close within) than to the obstructive sense that dominates in medicine.
In phonetics, an 'occlusive' (also called a 'stop' or 'plosive') is a consonant produced by completely blocking the airflow in the vocal tract and then releasing it. The sounds /p/, /b/, /t/, /d/, /k/, and /g/ are all occlusives — the lips or tongue close against the palate, stopping the air, then release it in a small burst. The phonetic term captures the physical act of occlusion: the vocal tract is closed against the airflow.
Phonologically, 'occlude' carries stress on the second syllable (/əˈkluːd/), following the regular English pattern for Latin-derived verbs. The double 'c' in the spelling reflects the assimilation of Latin 'ob-' to 'oc-' before the 'c' of 'claudere,' a regular Latin phonological process that is preserved in the English spelling.