con ‧ ceal /kənˈsiːl/ BrE AmE verb [transitive] formal
[ Date: 1200-1300 ; Language: Old French ; Origin: conceler , from Latin concelare , from com- ( ⇨ COM- ) + celare 'to hide' ]
1 . to hide something carefully:
The shadows concealed her as she crept up to the house.
The path was concealed by long grass.
a concealed weapon
2 . to hide your real feelings or the truth:
She tried to conceal the fact that she was pregnant.
conceal something from somebody
She was taking drugs and trying to conceal it from me.
—concealment noun [uncountable] :
deliberate concealment of his activities
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THESAURUS
▪ hide to make something difficult to see or find, or to not show your true feelings:
He hid the gun in his pocket.
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She tried to hide her anger.
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The actress put up a hand to hide her face from the cameras.
▪ conceal formal to hide something, especially by carefully putting it somewhere. Also used when talking about hiding your feelings, especially in negative sentences:
Several kilos of drugs were concealed in the back of the truck.
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He could not conceal his feelings any longer.
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The girl quickly concealed the photograph she had been gazing at.
▪ cover up to put something over another thing that you do not want people to see, in order to hide it completely:
People cover up cracks with wallpaper or tiles.
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I used some make-up to cover up the spots.
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She was wearing a thin shawl to cover up the bruises on her arm.
▪ disguise to make someone or something seem like a different person or thing, so that other people cannot recognize them:
She managed to get into the camp by disguising herself as a soldier.
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The men had disguised the vessel as fishing boat.
▪ camouflage to hide something by covering it with materials that make it look like the things around it:
We camouflaged the plane by covering it with leaves.
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The troops used charcoal to camouflage their faces.
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Soldiers had camouflaged the trucks with branches and dirt.
▪ obscure literary to make it difficult to see something clearly:
The view was obscured by mist.
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His body was found, partially obscured by bushes, at the bottom of a shallow canyon.
▪ mask to make something less noticeable, for example a taste, a smell, a sound, or a feeling:
The lemon helps to mask the taste of the fish.
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Helen had turned on the radio to mask the noise of the traffic.
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He did little to mask his contempt.