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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Covert way

Covert \Cov"ert\ (k?v"?rt), a. [OF. covert, F. couvert, p. p. of couvrir. See Cover, v. t.]

  1. Covered over; private; hid; secret; disguised.

    How covert matters may be best disclosed.
    --Shak.

    Whether of open war or covert guile.
    --Milton

  2. Sheltered; not open or exposed; retired; protected; as, a covert nook. -- Wordsworth.

    Of either side the green, to plant a covert alley.
    --Bacon.

  3. (Law) Under cover, authority or protection; as, a feme covert, a married woman who is considered as being under the protection and control of her husband.

    Covert way, (Fort.) See Covered way, under Covered.

    Syn: Hidden; secret; private; covered; disguised; insidious; concealed. See Hidden.

Covert way

Way \Way\, n. [OE. wey, way, AS. weg; akin to OS., D., OHG., & G. weg, Icel. vegr, Sw. v["a]g, Dan. vei, Goth. wigs, L. via, and AS. wegan to move, L. vehere to carry, Skr. vah. [root]136. Cf. Convex, Inveigh, Vehicle, Vex, Via, Voyage, Wag, Wagon, Wee, Weigh.]

  1. That by, upon, or along, which one passes or processes; opportunity or room to pass; place of passing; passage; road, street, track, or path of any kind; as, they built a way to the mine. ``To find the way to heaven.''
    --Shak.

    I shall him seek by way and eke by street.
    --Chaucer.

    The way seems difficult, and steep to scale.
    --Milton.

    The season and ways were very improper for his majesty's forces to march so great a distance.
    --Evelyn.

  2. Length of space; distance; interval; as, a great way; a long way.

    And whenever the way seemed long, Or his heart began to fail.
    --Longfellow.

  3. A moving; passage; procession; journey.

    I prythee, now, lead the way.
    --Shak.

  4. Course or direction of motion or process; tendency of action; advance.

    If that way be your walk, you have not far.
    --Milton.

    And let eternal justice take the way.
    --Dryden.

  5. The means by which anything is reached, or anything is accomplished; scheme; device; plan.

    My best way is to creep under his gaberdine.
    --Shak.

    By noble ways we conquest will prepare.
    --Dryden.

    What impious ways my wishes took!
    --Prior.

  6. Manner; method; mode; fashion; style; as, the way of expressing one's ideas.

  7. Regular course; habitual method of life or action; plan of conduct; mode of dealing. ``Having lost the way of nobleness.''
    --Sir. P. Sidney.

    Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace.
    --Prov. iii. 17.

    When men lived in a grander way.
    --Longfellow.

  8. Sphere or scope of observation.
    --Jer. Taylor.

    The public ministers that fell in my way.
    --Sir W. Temple.

  9. Determined course; resolved mode of action or conduct; as, to have one's way.

  10. (Naut.)

    1. Progress; as, a ship has way.

    2. pl. The timbers on which a ship is launched.

  11. pl. (Mach.) The longitudinal guides, or guiding surfaces, on the bed of a planer, lathe, or the like, along which a table or carriage moves.

  12. (Law) Right of way. See below. By the way, in passing; apropos; aside; apart from, though connected with, the main object or subject of discourse. By way of, for the purpose of; as being; in character of. Covert way. (Fort.) See Covered way, under Covered. In the family way. See under Family. In the way, so as to meet, fall in with, obstruct, hinder, etc. In the way with, traveling or going with; meeting or being with; in the presence of. Milky way. (Astron.) See Galaxy, 1. No way, No ways. See Noway, Noways, in the Vocabulary. On the way, traveling or going; hence, in process; advancing toward completion; as, on the way to this country; on the way to success. Out of the way. See under Out. Right of way (Law), a right of private passage over another's ground. It may arise either by grant or prescription. It may be attached to a house, entry, gate, well, or city lot, as well as to a country farm. --Kent. To be under way, or To have way (Naut.), to be in motion, as when a ship begins to move. To give way. See under Give. To go one's way, or To come one's way, to go or come; to depart or come along. --Shak. To go one's way to proceed in a manner favorable to one; -- of events. To come one's way to come into one's possession (of objects) or to become available, as an opportunity; as, good things will come your way. To go the way of all the earth or to go the way of all flesh to die. To make one's way, to advance in life by one's personal efforts. To make way. See under Make, v. t. Ways and means.

    1. Methods; resources; facilities.

    2. (Legislation) Means for raising money; resources for revenue.

      Way leave, permission to cross, or a right of way across, land; also, rent paid for such right. [Eng]

      Way of the cross (Eccl.), the course taken in visiting in rotation the stations of the cross. See Station, n., 7

    3. .

      Way of the rounds (Fort.), a space left for the passage of the rounds between a rampart and the wall of a fortified town.

      Way pane, a pane for cartage in irrigated land. See Pane, n., 4. [Prov. Eng.]

      Way passenger, a passenger taken up, or set down, at some intermediate place between the principal stations on a line of travel.

      Ways of God, his providential government, or his works.

      Way station, an intermediate station between principal stations on a line of travel, especially on a railroad.

      Way train, a train which stops at the intermediate, or way, stations; an accommodation train.

      Way warden, the surveyor of a road.

      Syn: Street; highway; road.

      Usage: Way, Street, Highway, Road. Way is generic, denoting any line for passage or conveyance; a highway is literally one raised for the sake of dryness and convenience in traveling; a road is, strictly, a way for horses and carriages; a street is, etymologically, a paved way, as early made in towns and cities; and, hence, the word is distinctively applied to roads or highways in compact settlements.

      All keep the broad highway, and take delight With many rather for to go astray.
      --Spenser.

      There is but one road by which to climb up.
      --Addison.

      When night Darkens the streets, then wander forth the sons Of Belial, flown with insolence and wine.
      --Milton.

Wikipedia
Covert Way

Covert Way is the only Local Nature Reserve in the London Borough of Enfield. It is also part of the Hadley Wood Golf Course and Covert Way Field Site of Borough Importance for Nature Conservation, Grade I, and it has an area of 7 hectares. It is on the southern border of Enfield between the road named Covert Way and Monken Hadley Common in Barnet.

Part of the site is semi-deciduous woodland which has woodpeckers and muntjac deer, and butterflies including white-letter and purple hair-streaks. In grassland areas there are the rare adder's-tongue fern and the locally scarce four-spot orb weaver spider.

Usage examples of "covert way".

From this forward position, a covert way and angling work now snaked to within 275 yards of Cornwalliss line.

From this forward position, a covert way and angling work now snaked to within 275 yards of Cornwallis’.

He saw it in the covert way she glanced at him, in the concealed alarm and compliance of her posture.

Unless he was legitimate in some covert way, as Rafe claimed to be with ISC.

But the possibility existed that their Queen was not acting from strict neutrality but, in her covert way, as an ally to Mara's human cause.

THAT YOUR GOVERNMENT HAS CHOSEN TO INTRUDE UPON US IN THIS SLY AND COVERT WAY, PRETENDING TO EXTEND THE HAND OF FRIENDSHIP TO OUR PEOPLE WHILE HOLDING A SWORD OVER US, IS THE VERY MARK OF SATAN, AND WERE IT KNOWN AMONG RIGHTEOUS AND HONORABLE MEN, THEY WOULD RISE UP AS ONE AND DEMAND THAT YOU INSTANTLY WITHDRAW YOUR DETESTABLE OPPRESSORS FROM OUR LANDS AND PROVINCES.

Ebbing from him in her trim, covert way, she continued to retreat and then, by degrees, was gone.

The ignorant might blame science for the ills and evils of the modern era, but that was a case of mistaken identity - no research scientist ever polluted a water table with PCB, or performed a third-trimester abortion, or denied someone insurance based on a genetic screening, or turned the Internet into a covert way of peering into private lives.

She responded to Saddith's glow in the same pale, passive, covert way she had so often dealt with her parents.