he sneaked into the castle to rescue Ivanhoe in the guise of a priest coming to give Ivanhoe his last rites
she felt as though she should be wearing some sort of Germanic guise, complete with dirndl, for the fall festival featuring traditional German food and drink
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However, her origin myth, in which she was hatched from an egg laid by her mother, Leda, who had been ravished by Zeus in the guise of a swan, is plainly invention.—Gitanjali Roy, Encyclopedia Britannica, 30 Apr. 2026 This pliable guise is partially what makes his persona such a durable meme.—Brady Brickner-Wood, New Yorker, 29 Apr. 2026 Listeners who’d never stolen away to a soft-serve stand under the guise of an innocent meetup responded to the song’s mellifluous reading of coming-of-age courtship and simpler-days nostalgia.—Literary Hub, 29 Apr. 2026 Those are the values SB 180 stripped in 2025 — a law that, under the guise of expediting hurricane recovery, suspends local comprehensive planning statewide for three years, reaching well beyond rebuilding, into stormwater management, environmental protection, and recouping the costs of growth.—Haley Busch, The Orlando Sentinel, 26 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for guise
Word History
Etymology
Middle English gise, guise, from Anglo-French, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German wīsa manner — more at wise