1HIDE/MAKE IT HARD TO FIND OR SEE[uncountableU] a way of hiding something, especially soldiers and militaryequipment, by using paint, leaves etc to make it look like the things around it 〔尤指士兵或军事设备的〕伪装
soldiers learning camouflage technique
在学习伪装技术的士兵
the camouflage netting over the tanks
坦克上的伪装网
2[uncountableU] the type of green and brown clothes, paint etc that soldiers wear to make themselves more difficult to see 〔士兵为伪装穿的〕迷彩服;伪装色
The men were dressed in camouflage and carrying automatic weapons.
这些人身穿迷彩服,手提自动武器。
camouflage trousers
迷彩裤
3HIDE/MAKE IT HARD TO FIND OR SEE[singular, uncountableU] the way that the colour or shape of an animal protects it by making it difficult to see in the area in which it lives 保护色,保护形状
The whiteness of the arctic fox acts as camouflage, hiding it from its enemies.
北极狐有白毛作保护色,让自己躲避天敌。
4HIDE/MAKE IT HARD TO FIND OR SEE[singular, uncountableU]behaviour that is designed to hide something 伪装,掩饰
camouflage for
Aggression is often a camouflage for insecurity.
好斗往往是对缺乏安全感的掩饰。
Examples from the Corpus
camouflage• We used leaves and sticks as camouflage.• The stripes of the tiger provide important camouflage in its naturalsetting.• Marines in camouflagefatigues and grease paint, along with a few frogmen, boarded three rubberboats for Yudo Island.• But like all good hunters going into the jungle, I needed camouflage.• Equipment was checked once more and the Jockspaired off to arrange each other's camouflage.• Lee was pulling bits of twig through the camouflagenet and going to the entrance all the time to look at Caspar.
camouflage2 verb [transitiveT]
HIDE/MAKE IT HARD TO FIND OR SEEto hide something, especially by making it look the same as the things around it, or by making it seem like something else 〔用伪装〕遮掩,掩饰
camouflage something with something
I saw a truck, heavily camouflaged with netting and branches.
我看见一辆卡车给网和树枝遮掩得严严实实。
The strain she was under was well camouflaged by skilful make-up.
well camouflaged• The fry are on the small side, so they, too, are well camouflaged.• The offices of the renownedLiteraryReview are well camouflaged.• Wherever the Baroque music was coming from, and it was somewhere in the room, the equipment was well camouflaged.• And even that was well camouflaged by skilfulmake-up.• One railbridge, well camouflaged, is not shown on any map.• Freezing is a widespreadresponse to a predatoralarm among many of the better camouflagedspecies.• Another bird that dies in the same way may be so small and well camouflaged that no one notices it.
Origincamouflage1
(1900-2000)Frenchcamoufler“to change the appearance of”, from Italiancamuffare