Let $A$ be some alphabet.
$A$ itself is a regular language.
$E = A^*$ is regular language over $A$. $E$ is a superset of all languages over $A$, regular or otherwise, i.e $E$ contains every possible string from symbols of $A$.
Now let $L$ be some regular language over $A$.
What is $\tilde{L} = L \cdot E$ ? More specifically, how $\tilde{L}$ and $E$ relate to each other? Are they equal? Is one subset of the other? Something else?
Source of the confusion is the following reasoning: closure under concatenation says that $\tilde{L}$ is a regular language and therefore $\tilde{L} \subseteq E$ (according to the above). On the other hand $\tilde{L}$ seems to contain strings $E$ does not, i.e. those that are formed by concatenating non-empty string from both languages.
Obviously this is wrong. What is going on here?