- Hitler himself committed suicide as Soviet forces were closing in on Berlin.
- As Parretti walked across the tarmac, fraud officers closed in.
- The dark nights and cold weather are closing in.
- The cops were closing in on the thugs.
- They closed in quietly and trapped the bear.
- My problems are closing in on me.
- I feel trapped. Everything is closing in.
***
1. PHRASAL VERB:
If a group of people close in on a person or place, they come nearer and nearer to them and gradually surround them. (= move in)
2. PHRASAL VERB:
When winter or darkness closes in, it arrives. (= descend)
***
1. Lit. to move inward on someone or something.
2. Fig. [for threats or negative feelings] to overwhelm or seem to surround someone or something.
***
Cf 1. If you are closing on someone or something that you are following, you are getting nearer and nearer to them.
- I was within 15 seconds of the guy in second place and closing on him.
Cf 2. close (someone or something) in (something) :
to contain someone or something in something or some place; to seal someone or something inside something.
- Don't close the bird in such a small cage.
- Don't close me in! Leave the door open.
.... Cobuild, McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verb
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