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
But, as fans already know, that perky veneer is often a shroud over her aching vulnerability, which is spotlighted with intensity on her melodically mature third album, out now.—Melissa Ruggieri, USA Today, 12 June 2026 Also indicative of a dense shroud of gas were signs of fluorescence and helium-absorbing radiation.—Robert Lea, Space.com, 10 June 2026
Verb
It’s shrouded in vetiver and jasmine, with a drydown of copal, a warm and woody incense.—Ariel Wodarcyk, InStyle, 12 June 2026 But, as Kalshi backers often point out on social media, Adventure One is shrouded in mystery.—Dan Bernstein, Sportico.com, 11 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