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1 secrecy
noun (the state of being or the act of keeping secret.) μυστικότητα -
2 Secrecy
Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Secrecy
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3 secrecy
1) εχεμύθεια2) μυστικότητα -
4 hammer home
(to make great efforts to make a person realize: We'll have to hammer home to them the importance of secrecy.) κάνω(κάποιον)να καταλάβει -
5 secret
['si:krit] 1. adjective(hidden from, unknown to, or not told to, other people: a secret agreement; He kept his illness secret from everybody.) μυστικός/απόρρητος2. noun1) (something which is, or must be kept, secret: The date of their marriage is a secret; industrial secrets.) μυστικό2) (a hidden explanation: I wish I knew the secret of her success.) μυστικό•- secrecy- secretive
- secretively
- secretiveness
- secretly
- secret agent
- secret police
- in secret
- keep a secret -
6 veil
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7 Ballot
subs.Voting pebble or act of voting: P. and V. ψῆφος, ἡ.Voting: P. διαψήφισις, ἡ, V. ψήφου φορά, ἡ.The secrecy of the ballot: P. τὸ κρύβδην ψηφίζεσθαι (Dem. 415).——————v. intrans.P. and V. ψῆφον φέρειν, ψῆφον τίθεσθαι, ψηφίζεσθαι, P. διαιψηφίζεσθαι.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Ballot
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8 Concealment
Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Concealment
См. также в других словарях:
Secrecy — Se cre*cy, n.; pl. {Secrecies}. [From {Secret}.] 1. The state or quality of being hidden; as, his movements were detected in spite of their secrecy. [1913 Webster] The Lady Anne, Whom the king hath in secrecy long married. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2 … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
secrecy — index concealment, confidence (relation of trust), evasion, mystery, obscuration, privacy Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
secrecy — (n.) early 15c., secretee, quality of being secret, from O.Fr. secré, variant of secret (see SECRET (Cf. secret)). Form altered late 16c. on model of primacy, etc … Etymology dictionary
secrecy — [n] concealment clandestineness, confidence, confidentiality, covertness, dark, darkness, furtiveness, hiding, hush, isolation, mystery, privacy, reticence, retirement, seclusion, secretiveness, secretness, silence, solitude, stealth, suppression … New thesaurus
secrecy — [sē′krə sē] n. pl. secrecies [altered < ME secretee < secre, secret < OFr secré < L secretus: see SECRET] 1. the condition of being secret or concealed 2. a tendency to keep things secret; practice or habit of being secretive … English World dictionary
Secrecy — For the 2008 documentary film, see Secrecy (film). Secret and Covert redirect here. For other uses, see Secret (disambiguation) and Covert (disambiguation). Clandestinity redirects here. For the diriment impediment in the canon law of the Roman… … Wikipedia
secrecy — n. 1) to ensure secrecy 2) strict secrecy 3) secrecy in (secrecy in conducting negotiations) 4) in secrecy (to meet in secrecy) (the meetings were held in the strictest secrecy) 5) (misc.) to swear smb. to secrecy * * * [ siːkrɪsɪ] (misc.) to… … Combinatory dictionary
secrecy — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ absolute, complete, total ▪ great, strict, utmost ▪ excessive ▪ government … Collocations dictionary
secrecy — se|cre|cy [ˈsi:krəsi] n [U] [Date: 1500 1600; Origin: secretie secrecy (15 16 centuries), from secre secret (14 16 centuries), from Old French secré, from Latin secretus; SECRET1] 1.) the process of keeping something secret, or when something is… … Dictionary of contemporary English
secrecy — se|cre|cy [ sikrəsi ] noun uncount a situation in which you keep something secret, or the process of keeping something secret: Discussions were to take place in total secrecy. shrouded/cloaked/veiled in secrecy: The Iraqi contract was shrouded in … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
secrecy — noun (U) 1 the process of keeping something secret, or the state of being kept a secret: I must stress the need for absolute secrecy about the project. 2 be sworn to secrecy if you have been sworn to secrecy by someone, you have promised them… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English