Guise in a sentence as a noun

TC has always been a big scam under the guise of journalism.

So if I'm hired under the guise of being a ninja you can expect to never see me in the office.

"Parson kills an animal under the guise of crop protection and to feed a village.

On HN, it's tangential criticisms in the guise of an actual counterargument.

Some believe that the police merely are trying to use the guise of charges to obtain the suspect's name in order to harass him outside the courts.

Because it's more satisfying to be a jerk towards someone who can do nothing about the situation, under the guise of principle.

We all know he signed that lease specifically to run a pseudo-hotel business under the guise of an Airbnb profile.

* A few ethically challenged entrepreneurs setup websites to sell DMC under the guise of DMC for Pets to get around FDA.

He is making self-serving arguments under the guise of caring about lofty ideals that his own actions demonstrate he has no regard for.

I use my real name as a way of keeping myself accountable as I've noticed that I'm much more inflammatory when under the guise of a pseudonym.

By putting the words "this isn't legal advice" before your comment, you aren't magically making it okay to give your opinion in the guise of advice.

Now they have some chieftain try to change the conversation into "Tell me what you loved about Reader", under the guise that they will use your comment to help make better products.

But that's after intentions changed -- a broken port to new tech with the intention to fix it, then that changed, and thus it got dropped under the guise of "Remove dead code"me: fair enough.

One, cdata is going to pursue a strategy of nitpickery, mockery, and isolation to dis-empower dissatisfied victims of his company's software, under the guise of smoothing ruffled feathers.

Basically what they're saying is "we're ok with subverting the constitution if it fits our needs".The executive branch's power has gotten completely out of hand in the past decade, all under the guise of "security" and preventing "terrorism".

" You're not fooling anyone: the schtick you are employing is to make statements that are tailored to offend, under the guise of "stating your opinion," and then get outraged when they do offend and people take advantage of the moderation mechanism of a downvote to say, "we don't want this here.

That the FDA is likely pandering to this industry under the dishonest guise of consumer health protection makes me more distrustful of it as an independent entity.----If my suspicions are right, this is a perfect example of how regulation begets regulation.

Like with anything else, the question isn't whether the rich will be able to afford it, the question is how much progress can we make in making it cheap, how quickly, to get it to how many people?It is a moral imperative to make sure that short-sighted class warfare does not cut off the nose to spite the face by destroying this work under the guise of egalitarianism, because we can not turn on a dime and immediately grant it to everyone on day one. Yes, the rich will get it first.

There is a lot of physics that suffers from "bad metaphysics" precisely because of its practitioners reinventing metaphysics, in the guise of "interpretations" of physics, when they are unaware of obvious problems that arise, which even a small amount of reading would've made them aware of.

The idea is that the Constitution basically says whatever you want it to say if you twist it far enough under the guise of "the founders if they were here today would've intended..."As important as, say, the right to privacy is there is no such right enumerated in the Constitution.

Guise definitions

noun

an artful or simulated semblance; "under the guise of friendship he betrayed them"

See also: pretense pretence pretext