Noun
the truth of the affair will always be hidden under a shroud of secrecy Verb
The mountains were shrouded in fog.
Their work is shrouded in secrecy.
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Noun
Some researchers have theorized that these curious small galaxies could harbor black holes that are buried in thick shrouds of cosmic dust.—
Robert Lea,
Space.com,
6 July 2026 Recent ideas suggest that little red dots could be black holes cocooned in thick gas, possibly representing a completely new type of object called a black hole star, in which the tight shroud of gas emits light like a stellar atmosphere.—Quanta Magazine,
2 July 2026
Verb
Dark web markets are shrouded in secrecy, but admins of dark web marketplaces have been identified by law enforcement and arrested before.—
Tim McNicholas,
CBS News,
1 July 2026 But the part of the building once covered with letters spelling the president’s name is now shrouded in a tarp.—
Steven Sloan,
Chicago Tribune,
28 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for shroud
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English, garment, from Old English scrūd; akin to Old English scrēade shred — more at shred entry 1