cloaked

[ UK /klˈə‍ʊkt/ ]
[ US /ˈkɫoʊkt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. covered with or as if with clothes or a wrap or cloak
    cloud-wrapped peaks
    a beam draped with cobwebs
    leaf-clothed trees
    fog-cloaked meadows
  2. having its true character concealed with the intent of misleading
    masked threat
    hidden agenda
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How To Use cloaked In A Sentence

  • That which is soft and effeminate, which is calculated to excite the passions, by multitudes of ambiguous expressions, (not the less dangerous for being so cloaked) should be considered by Christians as an abuse the more deplorable, as it has even been censured and condemned by the pagans. The Life and Legends of Saint Francis of Assisi
  • The storm was cloaked like a hidden monster behind a stratiform cloud veil (nimbostratus) with a little fractus in the foreground.
  • Rising next to the CCTV building, and also designed by OMA, the dazzling Television Cultural Center, or TVCC, peaks and plummets like a mountain cloaked in corrugated zinc. Road to Beijing | Impact Lab
  • The meeting was cloaked in mystery.
  • Their staging agreements are cloaked in secrecy and the rest of us have had a raw deal. Times, Sunday Times
  • Many other trial records evidently contain allusions to fairies which have been cloaked with demonological definition, however only those which contain direct references to fairies will be used as evidence of popular fairy belief.
  • These were the ones whose jeans looked uncomfortably snug, whose faces had a moonish quality that didn't quite seem accustomed, who cloaked themselves in voluminous hoodies. Your college kid, plus 15
  • Oaxaca the sun had set just a few hours ago and the city was cloaked in the blue half-light of dusk.
  • A government cloaked and soaked in secrecy swiftly becomes rotten and corrupt. Times, Sunday Times
  • The answer was returned in a still louder laugh, and in a shot fired at the challenger, the momentary light of the explosion revealing, as Dauntrees imagined, a cloaked figure presenting a harquebuss through the window. Rob of the bowl : a legend of St. Inigoe's,
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