0 to cover or surround something or someone completely:
1 to cover or enclose something completely:
The number of predators surviving at the end of experiment and their transformation into subsequent-instar larvae or encased pupae (for sciomyzid larvae) were also considered.
But he encases it in yet another closed movement that shuts away his name, which is his body.
It is possible to manipulate the snare underneath chronic foreign bodies that have become encased by fibrin.
The tower's symmetrical skin certainly efficiently encases and thereby reflects the telescope lattice as the spine around which the building is sculpted.
These essays make a compelling case for re-examining cultural constructions that encase descriptive texts about toleration.
The genome is encased in an icosahedral protein shell along with viral enzymes (protease, reverse transcriptase and integrase) and a matrix protein.
Cystacanths are encased in an envelope, and, with their proboscis invaginated, their overall body shape is roughly ovoid.
The original ear then substructures were encased in a new masonry platform.