English

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Etymology

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From re- +‎ cloak.

Verb

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recloak (third-person singular simple present recloaks, present participle recloaking, simple past and past participle recloaked)

  1. (transitive, chiefly figuratively) To cloak again or anew.
    • 1999, Jean Markale, The Grail: The Celtic Origins of the Sacred Icon, page 5:
      That is why it is necessary to analyze the story by Chretien de Troyes, before examining the numerous aspects that have recloaked the legend.
    • 2001, Jana Evans Braziel, Kathleen LeBesco, Bodies out of bounds: fatness and transgression, page 270:
      Dierlam thus simultaneously recloaks herself as Helen Melon and reminds us that the figure before us does not exist solely as a character or performance.

Anagrams

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