keep+out+of+sight
81Decorum — Not to be confused with Dacorum. Paolo Veronese s Last Supper (The Feast in the House of Levi). Veroese was summoned before the Inquisition on the basis that his composition, for the refectory of a monastery, was indecorous. It does indeed show a …
82mooch — (v.) mid 15c., pretend poverty, probably from O.Fr. muchier, mucier to hide, sulk, conceal, hide away, keep out of sight, of uncertain origin, perhaps from Celtic or Germanic (Liberman prefers the latter, Klein the former). Or the word may be a… …
83sequester — v 1. withdraw, retire, hibernate, drop or keep out of sight, seclude oneself, hide or conceal oneself, go into hiding, cover one s tracks; lie hid or hidden, lie perdu, Dial. lie snug or close, Inf. lie low, Inf. hide out, Sl. hole up, Sl. sit… …
84hide — Ⅰ. hide [1] ► VERB (past hid; past part. hidden) 1) put or keep out of sight. 2) conceal oneself. 3) keep secret. ► NOUN Brit. ▪ a camouflaged shelter used to observe wild …
85hided — Ⅰ. hide [1] ► VERB (past hid; past part. hidden) 1) put or keep out of sight. 2) conceal oneself. 3) keep secret. ► NOUN Brit. ▪ a camouflaged shelter used to observe wild …
86hider — Ⅰ. hide [1] ► VERB (past hid; past part. hidden) 1) put or keep out of sight. 2) conceal oneself. 3) keep secret. ► NOUN Brit. ▪ a camouflaged shelter used to observe wild …
87con|ceal´er — con|ceal «kuhn SEEL», transitive verb. 1. to put or keep out of sight; hide: »He concealed the ball behind his back. ... the complexity and hard work which real science involves…is concealed in popular expositions (Arthur Beer). SYNONYM(S): See… …
88con|ceal´a|ble — con|ceal «kuhn SEEL», transitive verb. 1. to put or keep out of sight; hide: »He concealed the ball behind his back. ... the complexity and hard work which real science involves…is concealed in popular expositions (Arthur Beer). SYNONYM(S): See… …
89con|ceal — «kuhn SEEL», transitive verb. 1. to put or keep out of sight; hide: »He concealed the ball behind his back. ... the complexity and hard work which real science involves…is concealed in popular expositions (Arthur Beer). SYNONYM(S): See syn. under …
90Sink — (s[i^][ng]k), v. t. 1. To cause to sink; to put under water; to immerse or submerge in a fluid; as, to sink a ship. [1913 Webster] [The Athenians] fell upon the wings and sank a single ship. Jowett (Thucyd.). [1913 Webster] 2. Figuratively: To… …