English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

super- +‎ secret

Adjective edit

supersecret (comparative more supersecret, superlative most supersecret)

  1. Extremely secret or secretive
    Synonyms: top secret, top-secret, ultrasecret
    • 2007 January 18, David M. Halbfinger, “Hollywood Rethinks Its Ratings Process”, in New York Times[1]:
      The changes come a year after a Sundance film, “This Film Is Not Yet Rated,” excoriated the rating system as a supersecret star chamber.

Translations edit

Noun edit

supersecret (plural supersecrets)

  1. A piece of highly secret information.
    • 2011, Joseph P. Farrell, Roswell and the Reich: The Nazi Connection:
      While this author has argued that most of those "supersecrets" fell into American hands, or, worse, that the most radical and exotic of these supersecrets remained in Nazi hands after the war, Agoston's book is signally important in that it was the first public recounting of the Kammler Group and the first disclosure that much more was going on inside of Nazi Germany besides the development of jet aircraft and rockets.