Masked in a sentence as an adjective

This is nothing but evil masked as "were doing this for the user.

I wonder how long it'll be till we see the first "masked" conference, Italian style.

Since the 500 samples per second was driven by a hardware timer interrupt, we needed that to not be masked out.

By making frameworks they masked the incompatibilities of the language, making it seem like a friend.

The masks aren't that highly effective - that seven-foot-tall masked woman is pretty easy to ID, mask or no - but if everyone plays along the game can go well.

The illegitimate use of the address book is being masked by a legitimate use - even if permission is asked for it will likely be granted.

After Jeri Ellsworth was fired from Valve, she had said that the "flat organization" of Valve masked an informal but very real hierarchy that was made up of elites and their cliques.

There are salient points here, but they're masked by the caricature of a maniac who can't go without Facebook for five seconds and a mythical beast that never gives his brain a break from work.

I discovered that this was not possible, in part because the idiocy of policy that does _not_ make sense is masked by rhetorical tricks and argumentation such as we're seeing here.

Adria thinks she won something here, she doesn't give a damn she destroyed someone's career over a simple sexual pun in a private conversation that she wasn't apart of nor was it directed towards her. I wish you luck in finding a new job where the company will actually try to defend their employee against such sensationalist nonsense masked as equality.

Consider the following: there is a masked hero who breaks into crackhouses and drug dens, obtains evidence that the authorities were unable to legally acquire, and then promptly hands this evidence over to authorities.

Masked definitions

adjective

having its true character concealed with the intent of misleading; "hidden agenda"; "masked threat"

See also: cloaked disguised

adjective

having markings suggestive of a mask; "the masked face of a raccoon"