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Secrecy   /sˈikrəsi/   Listen
Secrecy

noun
(pl. secrecies)
1.
The trait of keeping things secret.  Synonyms: secretiveness, silence.
2.
The condition of being concealed or hidden.  Synonyms: concealment, privacy, privateness.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Secrecy" Quotes from Famous Books



... commission heralds a new departure for the paper, I have to ask you to be good enough not to make known the object of your journey. In fact, it will be as well if you do not state your whereabouts to any persons other than your near relatives. Of course, all need for secrecy ceases with the appearance of your first article; but by that time you will practically be on your way home again. I am anxious to impress on you the importance ...
— The Silent Barrier • Louis Tracy

... of modern conditions upon the old tradition of the family is this: that beneath the pretence that nothing is changing, secretly and with all the unwholesomeness of secrecy everything is changed. Offspring fall away, the birth rate falls and falls most among just the most efficient and active and best adapted classes in the community. The species is recruited from among its failures and from among less civilised aliens. Contemporary ...
— The New Machiavelli • Herbert George Wells

... sent to this city, asking that he be granted permission to leave Macao, because he feared that they were about to kill him in order to gain possession of his property. I am the only person who can send this memorial to your Majesty, as Lope de Palacios sent it to this city with much secrecy, and in the same manner was it given to me. I discussed the matter with the president, saying that we should send for the captain as if the idea were our own and he had not requested it—employing so great secrecy, so that the ...
— The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, V7, 1588-1591 • Emma Helen Blair

... hundred of whom were young nobles, the officers of this sacred legion. Monsieur de Polignac and Monsieur de Riviere, whose conduct as chiefs of this advance was most remarkable, afterwards preserved an impenetrable secrecy as to the names of those of their accomplices who were not discovered. It may be said, therefore, now that the Restoration has made matters clearer, that Bonaparte never knew the extent of the danger he then ran, any more than England ...
— An Historical Mystery • Honore de Balzac

... England. And now, as we've got twenty-eight hours to go still, there's time to write a letter. The last three days' postcards have been scrappy and unintelligible, but we departed without warning and with the most Sherlock Holmes secrecy. Not a word about which ports we were ...
— Letters to Helen - Impressions of an Artist on the Western Front • Keith Henderson


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