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secrecy
(redirected from secrecies)

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
se·cre·cy  (skr-s)
n. pl. se·cre·cies
1. The quality or condition of being secret or hidden; concealment.
2. The ability or habit of keeping secrets; closeness.

[Alteration of Middle English secretee, from secret, secret; see secret.]

secrecy [ˈsiːkrɪsɪ]
n pl -cies
1. the state or quality of being secret
2. the state of keeping something secret
3. the ability or tendency to keep things secret

Secrecy 
  1. About as loose-lipped as a Swiss banker —Harold Adams
  2. Another person’s secret is like another person’s money: you are not so careful with it as you are with your own —Edgar Watson Howe
  3. As secret as the grave —Miguel de Cervantes
  4. Close up like a cabbage —John Andrew Holmes
  5. Close up like a fist —Anon
  6. Covert as a brass band —George F. Will
  7. Fondles his secrets like a case of tools —Karl Shapiro
  8. Furtive as a chipmunk —R. V. Cassill
  9. Hide … like a disgrace —George Gissing
  10. In the mind and nature of a man a secret is an ugly thing, like a hidden physical defect —Isak Dinesen
  11. Lurking like a pilot fish among sharks —Speer Morgan
  12. Move … like a rodent, furtively —John Phillips
  13. Peered out (into the corridor) as stealthily as a mouse leaving its subterranean hole —Donald Seaman
  14. (My face is an open secret but in my letters I) perform like a true diplomat, cunning and sly —Delmore Schwartz

    See Also: CLEVERNESS

  15. Private and tight as a bank vault —Marge Piercy
  16. Secrecy as tight as a bull’s ass in fly time —Stephen Longstreet
  17. Secret as silence —Babette Deutsch
  18. A secret at home is like rocks under tide —D. M. Mulock
  19. Secret operations [by a government] are like sin; unless you’re good at sinning, you shouldn’t do it —George Kennan, CBS/TV, March 31, 1987
  20. Secrets are like measles: they take easy and spread easy —Bartlett’s Dictionary of Americanisms

    Now that measles is controlled by vaccine, a virus or the common cold would probably be a more appropriate point of reference.

  21. She has a mouth like a padlock —Graham Greene
  22. Sneak away [for an acceptable, honorable activity] … as furtively as if he were stealing to a lover’s tryst —Edith Wharton
  23. Stealthy and slow as a hidden sin —Stephen Vincent Benet See Also: SLOWNESS

Secrecy 

button one’s lip To keep quiet or silent; to keep a secret; also button up and button up one’s face or lip. The expression has been in use since 1868.

hugger-mugger Covert or clandestine behavior, secrecy, furtiveness; confusion or disarray. This expression, possibly derived from the Middle English mokeren ‘to conceal,’ appeared in Shakespeare’s Hamlet regarding the manner of Polonius’ burial:

And we have done but greenly In hugger mugger to inter him. (IV,v)

Although the expression maintains its furtive connotation, hugger-mugger now more frequently carries the meaning of jumbled confusion or disorganization, a meaning it assumed because clandestine activity is often hurried and haphazard.

You find matters … so clumsily set out, that you fare in the style called hugger-mugger. (William Jerdan, Autobiography, 1853)

in petto Undisclosed, kept secret; private, in one’s own thoughts or contemplation. This expression is Italian for ‘in the breast.’ Citations dating from the 17th century indicate that in petto is applied almost exclusively to affairs of church or state.

There are seven cardinals still remaining in petto, whose names the Pope keeps secret. (London Gazette, 1712)

little pitchers have big ears An exhortation or reminder to guard one’s tongue because children may overhear words not intended for their ears. The handle of a pitcher is sometimes called its “ear.” Thus, pitchers have ears is a pun on ears, and is analogous in meaning to walls have ears. This expression appeared in print by the mid-1500s; the later addition of little limits the kind of listeners to children.

Surely Miss Gray, knowing that little pitchers have ears, would have corrected the mistake. (Sarah Tytler, Buried Diamonds, 1886)

mum’s the word Remain silent; do not breathe a word of what was just said. Shakespeare conveyed this meaning in Henry VI, Part II:

Seal up your lips, and give no word but—mum. (I, ii)

This expression may have derived from the m-m sound, which can be produced only with closed lips. The phrase is particularly commonplace in Great Britain.

As to Cornwall, … between you and me, Mrs. Harper, mum’s the word. (Dinah Mulock, Agatha’s Husband, 1852)

on the q.t. Secretly, surreptitiously, covertly, clandestinely, on the sly. Q.t. is simply an abbreviation of the word quiet in the original expression on the quiet.

It will be possible to have one spree on the strict q.t. (George Moore, A Mummer’s Wife, 1884)

skeleton in the closet A family secret or scandal kept concealed to avoid public shame and disgrace; any confidential matter which, if revealed, could be a source of embarrassment, humiliation, or abasement. Though popularized in the writings of William Thackeray (1811-63), skeleton in the closet is reputedly based on an earlier legend that tells of a search for a truly happy person, one free from cares and woes. After such a person had apparently been found, she opened a closet and exposed a human skeleton. “I try to keep my troubles to myself,” she explained, “but every night my husband compels me to kiss that skeleton.” The skeleton, it seems, was that of a former paramour whom her husband had killed.

Some particulars regarding the Newcome family … will show us that they have a skeleton or two in their closets. (William Thackeray, The Newcomes, 1855)

A British variation is skeleton in the cupboard.

sub rosa Under the rose—in secret, privately, confidentially. Attempts have been made to trace the origin of this phrase to classical times; however, the OED states that it has Germanic origins. In Germany, and later in England and Holland, it was a common practice to paint or sculpture roses on the ceilings of banquet halls. The rose was a symbol reminding the revelers to watch their words. The phrase appeared in print by the mid-16th century. The English version under the rose is also heard.

Being all under the Rose they had privilege to speak all things with freedom. (James Howell, Parables Reflecting Upon the Times, 1643)

under one’s hat Secret, private, confidential; between you, me, and the lamppost; usually to keep something under one’s hat.

I’d be very grateful … if you’d keep the whole affair under your hat. (N. Marsh, Dead Water, 1963)

Although the exact origin of this expression is not known, perhaps at one time the space under a person’s hat was literally used to conceal things. Use of the phrase dates from the late 19th century.

walls have ears An admonition to be discreet in speech, implying that privacy is never certain and that no one is to be trusted. The expression is often linked with the so-called auriculaires of the Louvre Palace, tubes within the walls by means of which Catherine de Médicis reputedly learned of state secrets. There is no evidence, however, that the phrase actually owes its origin to these contrivances. A similar concept and personification appeared contemporaneously in Heywood’s Proverbs (1562):

Fields have eyes and woods have ears.

ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.secrecy - the trait of keeping things secret
uncommunicativeness - the trait of being uncommunicative
mum - secrecy; "mum's the word"
2.secrecy - the condition of being concealed or hiddensecrecy - the condition of being concealed or hidden
isolation - a state of separation between persons or groups
covertness, hiddenness - the state of being covert and hidden
bosom - the chest considered as the place where secret thoughts are kept; "his bosom was bursting with the secret"
confidentiality - the state of being secret; "you must respect the confidentiality of your client's communications"
hiding - the state of being hidden; "he went into hiding"

secrecy
noun
1. mystery, stealth, concealment, furtiveness, cloak and dagger, secretiveness, huggermugger (rare), clandestineness, covertness, surreptitiousness He shrouded his business dealings in secrecy.
2. confidentiality, privacy, private nature, classified nature The secrecy of the confessional.
3. confidentiality, privacy, silence, retirement, solitude, seclusion These problems had to be dealt with in the secrecy of your own cell.
Quotations
"If you would wish another to keep your secret, first keep it yourself" [Seneca Hippolytus]
Translations
secrecy [ˈsiːkrəsɪ] Nsecreto m
in secrecyen secreto, a escondidas
in the strictest secrecyde manera totalmente confidencial, en el más absoluto secreto
I was told in the strictest secrecyse me dijo de manera totalmente confidencial
to swear sb to secrecyhacer que algn jure no revelar algo
there's no secrecy about itno es ningún secreto
there was an air of secrecy about herla rodeaba un halo de misterio
see also shroud B2
see also veil A
secrecy [ˈsiːkrəsi] nsecret m
in secrecy → en secret
secrecy
n (of person, = ability to keep secrets) → Verschwiegenheit f; (= secretiveness)Geheimnistuerei f, → Heimlichtuerei f; (of event, talks)Heimlichkeit f; in secrecyim Geheimen; in strict secrecyganz im Geheimen; there is no secrecy about itdas ist kein Geheimnis ? swear
secrecy [ˈsiːkrəsɪ] nsegretezza
there's no secrecy about ... → non si fa mistero di...
in secrecy → in segreto, in tutta segretezza


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Lauding the secrecies laid by officers and jawans of Pakistan Army, they said, They (Army) have repeated the history.
Wood Not Yet Out" begins: closed and containing everything, the land leaning all round to block it from the wind, a squirrel sprinting in startles and sees sections of distance tilted through the trees and where you jump the fence a flap of sacking does for a stile, you walk through webs, the cracking bushtwigs break their secrecies, the sun vanishes up, instantly come and gone.
 
 
 
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