Today's word is cloister, spelled C-L-O-I-S-T-E-R.
Cloister is a verb.
To cloister someone or something is to shut the person or thing away from the world.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Florida Today.
Now,
the past Melbourne High student body president and co-valedictorian is planning to step down January 20th after serving nearly four years as NASA's administrator.
My constitution is such that I'm not going to retire,
and what I said is I'm going to cloister myself and write a book, and then we'll see what happens.
Nelson, who is now 82,
told reporters Wednesday during a roundtable discussion at the Kennedy Space Center press site.
Cloister first entered the English language as a noun in the 13th century,
referring then, as it still does, to a convent or monastery.
More than three centuries later,
English speakers began using the verb cloister to mean to seclude in or as if in a cloister.
Today,
the noun can also refer to the monastic life or to a covered and usually arched passage along or around a court.
You may also encounter the adjective cloistered with the meaning separated from the rest of the world
as if in a cloister,
as in, she leads a private, cloistered life in the country.
Cloister ultimately comes from the Latin verb claudere, meaning to close.