secret
Americanadjective
-
done, made, or conducted without the knowledge of others.
secret negotiations.
- Synonyms:
- covert, hidden, clandestine
-
kept from the knowledge of any but the initiated or privileged.
a secret password.
- Synonyms:
- confidential, private
-
faithful or cautious in keeping confidential matters confidential; close-mouthed; discreet.
-
designed or working to escape notice, knowledge, or observation: the secret police.
a secret drawer;
the secret police.
-
secluded, sheltered, or withdrawn.
a secret hiding place.
-
beyond ordinary human understanding; esoteric.
- Synonyms:
- mysterious, cryptic, occult
-
(of information, a document, etc.)
-
bearing the classification secret.
-
limited to persons authorized to use information documents, etc., so classified.
-
noun
-
something that is or is kept secret, hidden, or concealed.
-
a mystery.
the secrets of nature.
-
a reason or explanation not immediately or generally apparent.
-
a method, formula, plan, etc., known only to the initiated or the few: a trade secret.
the secret of happiness;
a trade secret.
-
a classification assigned to information, a document, etc., considered less vital to security than top-secret but more vital than confidential, and limiting its use to persons who have been cleared, as by various government agencies, as trustworthy to handle such material.
-
(initial capital letter) a variable prayer in the Roman and other Latin liturgies, said inaudibly by the celebrant after the offertory and immediately before the preface.
idioms
adjective
-
kept hidden or separate from the knowledge of others
-
known only to initiates
a secret password
-
hidden from general view or use
a secret garden
-
able or tending to keep things private or to oneself
-
operating without the knowledge of outsiders
a secret society
-
outside the normal range of knowledge
noun
-
something kept or to be kept hidden
-
something unrevealed; mystery
-
an underlying explanation, reason, etc, that is not apparent
the secret of success
-
a method, plan, etc, known only to initiates
-
liturgy a variable prayer, part of the Mass, said by the celebrant after the offertory and before the preface
-
among the people who know a secret
Other Word Forms
- nonsecret adjective
- quasi-secret adjective
- secretly adverb
- secretness noun
- semisecret adjective
- supersecret noun
- ultrasecret adjective
Etymology
Origin of secret
First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English secrette, from Old French secret, from Latin sēcrētus “hidden,” originally past participle of sēcernere “to secern ”
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
The leak is a blow for Anthropic because it risks both undermining its reputation for safety and also revealing valuable trade secrets in the pitched battle for enterprise customers.
Whilst this was "no secret", she described this rise as "unsustainable".
From BBC
Google’s researchers said a quantum computer may be on the horizon that’s powerful enough to crack a bitcoin wallet’s secret key in as few as nine minutes, potentially giving attackers access to investors’ funds.
From MarketWatch
Some is gossip she’s obliged to dispel, including one about the secret baby she was alleged to have had with DeBarge during their very short, doomed marriage.
From Salon
These days stars are more likely to reveal their own secrets on social media than have them revealed by a shadowy investigator.
From BBC
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.