Dissimulatus
Dissimulatus is a Latin adjective and the perfect passive participle of the verb dissimulare, meaning to feign, pretend, or conceal one’s true feelings or intentions. In classical texts, dissilimulatus is used to describe emotions, motives, or actions that are not genuine, often in discussions of rhetoric, politics, or personal behavior. The term is typically inflected for gender and number, with dissilumulatus (masculine), dissimulata (feminine), and dissimulatum (neuter) appearing in appropriate contexts.
Etymology and form follow standard Latin patterns. The root dissimulare combines a prefix sense of concealment
Usage and reception. Dissimulatus appears mainly in Latin passages and scholarly apparatuses that quote or annotate
See also. Dissimulation, dissimulation, feigning, pretend, Latin grammar and participles.