Having just happened to be confusing over game stages, thank you for this analysis! But also have a question of sorts. . .
The start of game appears to me to be equated to the fuseki, so much so the start of the game in the west is named as such. But is this also true for Japanese pros? Because the meaning of the word (Iwamoto Sensei's
seed-scattering go) comes to mind); it makes sense that such plays are common early on in a game, however is it not possible that in the late stages of a kyu match where the boundaries seem decided, one player may plant a seed and have it live. Perhaps this was a fuseki play, an opening play, that opened up new possibilities!
With that in mind, it is easier to conceive that a move which shuts down invasion possibilities is a
closing move, closing territory up as you would a bag

. It becomes obvious that you could play a yose move near the start of the game as you could play a fuseki move near the end of a game.
But following this line of reasoning, it seems to me that
fuseki ends up closer in nature to the word
aji, with the same being true for
yose and
aji-keshi; in both cases, the former could be said to cause the latter.
But that is odd to my eyes, so would you say this is closer to the nature of yose (and fuseki)?