Incog [adjective]
Definition of Incog:
in disguise
Sentence/Example of Incog:
The young Pretender, followed by about fifty Scotch and Irish adventurers, meanwhile, came incog.
True, but I learn that she means to make the entire trip incog.
I played at being successful, bought my own pictures through dealers—incog., of course—at enormous prices.
There is a well-known story of an English nobleman, desiring to remain incog.
Present your friend to me, incog., and I'll wager—oh, anything that I shall read her like a book on sight.
Hedlock fled at our approach, leaving many debts unpaid and finally lived incog.
Her son was the Duc d'Alencon; and as they both remained incog.
In a novel the hailing voice would be that of a lady or a Caliph incog., and it would lure me to adventure or romance.
The Prince of Wales honored the performance with his company part of the time; he came into the music incog.
I had travelled nearly the whole distance incog., without hearing my own name on a pair of human lips for weeks.