English edit

Etymology edit

Sense 1, at least, is probably a back-formation from surreptitious; for sense 2, compare the cognate synonym subreption.

Pronunciation edit

  • (US) IPA(key): /səˌɹɛpˈtɪʃən/, /ˌsʌɹəpˈtɪʃən/

Noun edit

surreptition (usually uncountable, plural surreptitions)

  1. The quality of being surreptitious: stealthiness, covertness; surreptitiousness.
    • 1986, Alan Bleasdale, The Monocled Mutineer, Vintage:
      They have found a way to continue drinking both furiously and yet with a certain degree of surreptition. The Australians near to the fence slice through the bonds keeping the wrists of the Tommies strapped to the posts. The first couple of ...
    • 2009, Jasvir Nagra, Christian Collberg, Surreptitious Software: Obfuscation, Watermarking, and Tamperproofing for Software Protection, Pearson Education, →ISBN:
      We will propose a model that tries to apply ideas taken from the way plants, animals, and human societies have used surreptition to protect themselves against attackers to the way we can protect software from attack.
  2. Subreption (act of obtaining by surprise, or by unfair representation through concealment).
    • 1908, Albert Hutchinson Putney, Equity jurisprudence. Trusts. Equity pleading, page 320:
      If any order shall be made, and the court not informed of the last material order formerly made, no benefit shall be taken by such order, as granted by abuse and surreptition, and to that end the registers ought duly to mention the former ...
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:surreptition.