The English equivalent of the Latin verb 'claudere' is 'to close' or 'to shut'. But the verb also may mean 'to close up a passage or place' or 'to make inaccessible'. Additionally, it may mean 'to bring to an end' or 'to conclude'. And it may mean 'to shut in or up', in the sense of confining, enclosing, or even hiding.
To close.
claudere
The word "conclude" comes from the Latin word "claudere," which means to shut or close. This origin suggests the idea of bringing something to an end or coming to a final decision or judgment.
The word is based on the Latin word recludere (shut up) from claudere, to close, from which close and closet also derive.
Decimus is the Latin word for 10. We get such words like "decimal" from this word.
The word football does not come from Latin. It is from the English language, and is a compound of foot and ball based on the Oxford English Dictionary.
The English word 'part' originated from Latin.
feline.
second
The word circa is Latin and in English it means about, approximately.
The English word corpse derives from the Latin corpus.
It comes from the Latin word Germania. Many English words come from Latin.