dissimulate

VERB
  1. hide (feelings) from other people
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How To Use dissimulate In A Sentence

  • Up to these days, black people, who represent half of Brazilian population, get lower wages, go more to prison and suffer strong, although dissimulated, prejudice. The Consequences of Slavery in Africa - Freakonomics Blog - NYTimes.com
  • They were decked out in tracksuits, seemingly to dissimulate their true function.
  • Obama forces Jeremiah Wright to dissimulate about the nature of his church, his and their views, opinions, and achievements. Hillary Telling Local Media In Future Voting States That Obama Wants Race To End
  • For instance, with a delight as dissimulated but also as deep as if it had been a case of serious illness, if I happened to be hot and the perspiration Time Regained
  • Gaddis also explained why diplomats must dissimulate and are therefore not only frustrating to historians but misunderstood by all sides in politics: Jim Sleeper: Henry Kissinger's Grand Strategy Takes a New Turn at Yale
  • Goneril and Regan used fraud to gain power, and now that they have it, no longer need to dissimulate.
  • As a half-buried house in its relation to the main access it appears diminished; on the other hand, from the river, it appears as a glass frame dissimulated on the vegetation. House in Gerês by Correia Ragazzi Architects
  • A rectangular concrete box with glazed sides, cantilevered over a hillside, dissimulated on the vegetation. House in Gerês by Correia Ragazzi Architects
  • Because some of these changes are either directly or indirectly subject to our choices, we are able to pretend or dissimulate emotion.
  • It is this defiant conspicuousness that refuses to dissimulate the mechanics of its own construction that Stubbes links to effeminacy and erotic excess.
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