secretly
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
secret/ˈsiːkrət/
▶adjective not known or seen or not meant to be known or seen by others.
■ fond of having or keeping secrets; secretive.
▶noun- 1 something kept or meant to be kept secret.
■ something not properly understood; a mystery: the secrets of the universe.
- 2 a way of achieving something, especially one that is not commonly known: the secret of a happy marriage is compromise.
- 3 a prayer said quietly by the priest after the offertory in a Roman Catholic Mass.
– derivatives
secrecy noun,
secretly adverb.
secrecy noun,
secretly adverb.
– origin ME: from OFr., from L. secretus ‘separate, set apart’, from secernere, from se- ‘apart’ + cernere ‘sift’.
'secretly' also found in these Oxford entries:
abscond
- ballot
- Brownie
- cahoots
- changeling
- clandestine
- closed
- connive
- decamp
- den
- dobby
- eavesdrop
- elope
- harbour
- laugh
- logic bomb
- moonlight
- overhear
- partisan
- plant
- plot
- police state
- q.t.
- quiet
- salt
- secret
- shadow
- side
- skip
- skulk
- smuggle
- spirit
- spy
- suborn
- subterfuge
- summon
- surreptitious
- tail
- tap
- tip
- Trojan Horse
- underground
- wiretapping

