0 to closely hold or completely cover someone or something: --
He enfolded her in his arms.
The base of the broad, sometimes fringed lip partially enfolds the column.
They have become part of the countryside which at one time they dominated and by which they are now enfolded.
Lenten sorrow always enfolds the first feast.
Sertoli cells enfold the spermatogenic cells and testicular spermatozoa, protecting them and supplying them with nourishment.
South-east massing including dining facade, spiral stair-tower and side elevation of east wing: children's spiral stair rhymes with baby tower and is enfolded by 'parental' gableforms. 19g.
The touch of the sea is sensuous, enfolding the body in its soft, close embrace.
We are simply human beings, enfolded in weakness and in hope, called together to change our world one hear t at a time.
Yet entities in the holomovie are also in implicate relations and thus enfolding each other.