the.com/inclusive

Building the table bigger instead of guarding who sits at it.

means Deliberately welcoming and accommodating people of all backgrounds, abilities, and identities, leaving no one outside by default.

from From Latin includere, to shut in or enclose, from in- plus claudere, to closethe irony being that closing in came to mean opening up.

Range trickIn math, inclusive counts both endpoints, not just between.
Hospitality rootSame claudere gives us close, cloister, and conclude.
Price tagAll-inclusive resorts borrow the same nothing-left-out promise.
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