mask steppings - определение. Что такое mask steppings
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Что (кто) такое mask steppings - определение

WAX OR PLASTER CAST MADE OF A PERSON’S FACE FOLLOWING DEATH
Death Mask; Deathmask; Death-mask; Life mask; Funerary mask; Funeral mask; Plaster life-mask; Life-mask
  • Golden funeral mask]] of [[Tutankhamun]]
  • 19th century death mask of an infant
  • ''[[L'Inconnue de la Seine]]''
  • 1908}}
  • Bronze death mask of [[Napoleon]]
  • Posthumous portrait bust of [[Henry VII of England]] by [[Pietro Torrigiano]], supposedly made using his death mask
Найдено результатов: 321
masked         
  • An American football player wearing a mask that protects his face from another player's hand
  • A Korean mask worn by a [[Talchum]] performer
  • A protective surgical mask
  • Golden masks excavated from the [[Kalmakareh Cave]] in [[Lorestan]], Iran, first half of first Millennium BC, [[National Museum of Iran]]
  • Asaro mudman]] holding mask, Papua New Guinea
  • recognition]]
  • A [[Peking opera]] mask
  •  access-date = February 26, 2016}}</ref>
  • Batak]] mask dance at a funeral feast in the [[Dutch East Indies]], 1930s
  • Kwakwaka'wakw ritual mask (painted wood, fiber, and cord)
  • Fang mask]] used for the ''ngil'' ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers. Wood, [[Gabon]], 19th century
  • Iranian surgical technologist with surgical mask
  • Masks of [[Cameroon]]
  • Anonymous]]'' wear Guy Fawkes masks while protesting against the [[Church of Scientology]], 2008, London
  • Vietnamese young people wear surgic masks after the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]
  • Makeup simulates a half-sided mask on this man for [[Halloween]]
  • The so-called '[[Mask of Agamemnon]]', a 16th-century BC mask discovered by [[Heinrich Schliemann]] in 1876 at [[Mycenae]], Greece, [[National Archaeological Museum, Athens]]
  • Mask of Shame]]"
  • Roman mosaic]], second century AD
  • [[Funeral mask]] of [[K'inich Janaab' Pakal]] at the [[National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)]]
  • reusable filter mask]] worn by [[NYPD]] officer
  • Greek mask
  • Three photographs of the same [[noh]] mask of a woman show how her expression appears to change with a tilting of the head of the performer - to demonstrate the effect, the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting and only the camera was moved
  • Masked dancers at a [[tshechu]] festival, [[Bhutan]], 2013
  • A Venetian carnival mask
  • Aztec mask of [[Xiuhtecuhtli]], c. 1500, of [[Mixtec]]-Aztec provenance
  • Mask of [[Tengu]]
  • Shu]]
ANY FULL OR PARTIAL FACE COVERING, WHETHER CEREMONIAL, PROTECTIVE, DECORATIVE, OR USED AS DISGUISE
Masks; Masked; Masks (protective); Protective masks; Protective mask; Masks in theatre; Masks and theatre; Masks in ritual; Masks in ritual and theatre; Masks in theater and ritual; Ritual mask; SARS mask; SARS Masks; Swine flu mask; Theatre mask; Tribal mask; Flu mask; Face cover; Melanesian masks; Native American masks; SARS Mask; Face covering; Masked theatre
If someone is masked, they are wearing a mask.
Masked youths threw stones and fire-bombs.
ADJ
mask         
  • An American football player wearing a mask that protects his face from another player's hand
  • A Korean mask worn by a [[Talchum]] performer
  • A protective surgical mask
  • Golden masks excavated from the [[Kalmakareh Cave]] in [[Lorestan]], Iran, first half of first Millennium BC, [[National Museum of Iran]]
  • Asaro mudman]] holding mask, Papua New Guinea
  • recognition]]
  • A [[Peking opera]] mask
  •  access-date = February 26, 2016}}</ref>
  • Batak]] mask dance at a funeral feast in the [[Dutch East Indies]], 1930s
  • Kwakwaka'wakw ritual mask (painted wood, fiber, and cord)
  • Fang mask]] used for the ''ngil'' ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers. Wood, [[Gabon]], 19th century
  • Iranian surgical technologist with surgical mask
  • Masks of [[Cameroon]]
  • Anonymous]]'' wear Guy Fawkes masks while protesting against the [[Church of Scientology]], 2008, London
  • Vietnamese young people wear surgic masks after the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]
  • Makeup simulates a half-sided mask on this man for [[Halloween]]
  • The so-called '[[Mask of Agamemnon]]', a 16th-century BC mask discovered by [[Heinrich Schliemann]] in 1876 at [[Mycenae]], Greece, [[National Archaeological Museum, Athens]]
  • Mask of Shame]]"
  • Roman mosaic]], second century AD
  • [[Funeral mask]] of [[K'inich Janaab' Pakal]] at the [[National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)]]
  • reusable filter mask]] worn by [[NYPD]] officer
  • Greek mask
  • Three photographs of the same [[noh]] mask of a woman show how her expression appears to change with a tilting of the head of the performer - to demonstrate the effect, the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting and only the camera was moved
  • Masked dancers at a [[tshechu]] festival, [[Bhutan]], 2013
  • A Venetian carnival mask
  • Aztec mask of [[Xiuhtecuhtli]], c. 1500, of [[Mixtec]]-Aztec provenance
  • Mask of [[Tengu]]
  • Shu]]
ANY FULL OR PARTIAL FACE COVERING, WHETHER CEREMONIAL, PROTECTIVE, DECORATIVE, OR USED AS DISGUISE
Masks; Masked; Masks (protective); Protective masks; Protective mask; Masks in theatre; Masks and theatre; Masks in ritual; Masks in ritual and theatre; Masks in theater and ritual; Ritual mask; SARS mask; SARS Masks; Swine flu mask; Theatre mask; Tribal mask; Flu mask; Face cover; Melanesian masks; Native American masks; SARS Mask; Face covering; Masked theatre
I. n.
1.
Cover (for the face), visor.
2.
Cloak, screen, blind, disguise, veil.
3.
Subterfuge, evasion, trick, shift, pretence, pretext, plea, ruse.
4.
Masquerade.
5.
Revel, piece of mummery, bustle.
II. v. a.
1.
Put a mask on.
2.
Disguise, conceal, hide, cloak, veil, screen, shroud, cover.
Masked         
  • An American football player wearing a mask that protects his face from another player's hand
  • A Korean mask worn by a [[Talchum]] performer
  • A protective surgical mask
  • Golden masks excavated from the [[Kalmakareh Cave]] in [[Lorestan]], Iran, first half of first Millennium BC, [[National Museum of Iran]]
  • Asaro mudman]] holding mask, Papua New Guinea
  • recognition]]
  • A [[Peking opera]] mask
  •  access-date = February 26, 2016}}</ref>
  • Batak]] mask dance at a funeral feast in the [[Dutch East Indies]], 1930s
  • Kwakwaka'wakw ritual mask (painted wood, fiber, and cord)
  • Fang mask]] used for the ''ngil'' ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers. Wood, [[Gabon]], 19th century
  • Iranian surgical technologist with surgical mask
  • Masks of [[Cameroon]]
  • Anonymous]]'' wear Guy Fawkes masks while protesting against the [[Church of Scientology]], 2008, London
  • Vietnamese young people wear surgic masks after the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]
  • Makeup simulates a half-sided mask on this man for [[Halloween]]
  • The so-called '[[Mask of Agamemnon]]', a 16th-century BC mask discovered by [[Heinrich Schliemann]] in 1876 at [[Mycenae]], Greece, [[National Archaeological Museum, Athens]]
  • Mask of Shame]]"
  • Roman mosaic]], second century AD
  • [[Funeral mask]] of [[K'inich Janaab' Pakal]] at the [[National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)]]
  • reusable filter mask]] worn by [[NYPD]] officer
  • Greek mask
  • Three photographs of the same [[noh]] mask of a woman show how her expression appears to change with a tilting of the head of the performer - to demonstrate the effect, the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting and only the camera was moved
  • Masked dancers at a [[tshechu]] festival, [[Bhutan]], 2013
  • A Venetian carnival mask
  • Aztec mask of [[Xiuhtecuhtli]], c. 1500, of [[Mixtec]]-Aztec provenance
  • Mask of [[Tengu]]
  • Shu]]
ANY FULL OR PARTIAL FACE COVERING, WHETHER CEREMONIAL, PROTECTIVE, DECORATIVE, OR USED AS DISGUISE
Masks; Masked; Masks (protective); Protective masks; Protective mask; Masks in theatre; Masks and theatre; Masks in ritual; Masks in ritual and theatre; Masks in theater and ritual; Ritual mask; SARS mask; SARS Masks; Swine flu mask; Theatre mask; Tribal mask; Flu mask; Face cover; Melanesian masks; Native American masks; SARS Mask; Face covering; Masked theatre
·adj ·same·as Personate.
II. Masked ·Impf & ·p.p. of Mask.
III. Masked ·adj Wearing a mask or masks; characterized by masks; cincealed; hidden.
IV. Masked ·adj Having the anterior part of the head differing decidedly in color from the rest of the plumage;
- said of birds.
mask         
  • An American football player wearing a mask that protects his face from another player's hand
  • A Korean mask worn by a [[Talchum]] performer
  • A protective surgical mask
  • Golden masks excavated from the [[Kalmakareh Cave]] in [[Lorestan]], Iran, first half of first Millennium BC, [[National Museum of Iran]]
  • Asaro mudman]] holding mask, Papua New Guinea
  • recognition]]
  • A [[Peking opera]] mask
  •  access-date = February 26, 2016}}</ref>
  • Batak]] mask dance at a funeral feast in the [[Dutch East Indies]], 1930s
  • Kwakwaka'wakw ritual mask (painted wood, fiber, and cord)
  • Fang mask]] used for the ''ngil'' ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers. Wood, [[Gabon]], 19th century
  • Iranian surgical technologist with surgical mask
  • Masks of [[Cameroon]]
  • Anonymous]]'' wear Guy Fawkes masks while protesting against the [[Church of Scientology]], 2008, London
  • Vietnamese young people wear surgic masks after the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]
  • Makeup simulates a half-sided mask on this man for [[Halloween]]
  • The so-called '[[Mask of Agamemnon]]', a 16th-century BC mask discovered by [[Heinrich Schliemann]] in 1876 at [[Mycenae]], Greece, [[National Archaeological Museum, Athens]]
  • Mask of Shame]]"
  • Roman mosaic]], second century AD
  • [[Funeral mask]] of [[K'inich Janaab' Pakal]] at the [[National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)]]
  • reusable filter mask]] worn by [[NYPD]] officer
  • Greek mask
  • Three photographs of the same [[noh]] mask of a woman show how her expression appears to change with a tilting of the head of the performer - to demonstrate the effect, the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting and only the camera was moved
  • Masked dancers at a [[tshechu]] festival, [[Bhutan]], 2013
  • A Venetian carnival mask
  • Aztec mask of [[Xiuhtecuhtli]], c. 1500, of [[Mixtec]]-Aztec provenance
  • Mask of [[Tengu]]
  • Shu]]
ANY FULL OR PARTIAL FACE COVERING, WHETHER CEREMONIAL, PROTECTIVE, DECORATIVE, OR USED AS DISGUISE
Masks; Masked; Masks (protective); Protective masks; Protective mask; Masks in theatre; Masks and theatre; Masks in ritual; Masks in ritual and theatre; Masks in theater and ritual; Ritual mask; SARS mask; SARS Masks; Swine flu mask; Theatre mask; Tribal mask; Flu mask; Face cover; Melanesian masks; Native American masks; SARS Mask; Face covering; Masked theatre
n. a death; gas; oxygen; ski; stocking; surgical mask
Mask         
  • An American football player wearing a mask that protects his face from another player's hand
  • A Korean mask worn by a [[Talchum]] performer
  • A protective surgical mask
  • Golden masks excavated from the [[Kalmakareh Cave]] in [[Lorestan]], Iran, first half of first Millennium BC, [[National Museum of Iran]]
  • Asaro mudman]] holding mask, Papua New Guinea
  • recognition]]
  • A [[Peking opera]] mask
  •  access-date = February 26, 2016}}</ref>
  • Batak]] mask dance at a funeral feast in the [[Dutch East Indies]], 1930s
  • Kwakwaka'wakw ritual mask (painted wood, fiber, and cord)
  • Fang mask]] used for the ''ngil'' ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers. Wood, [[Gabon]], 19th century
  • Iranian surgical technologist with surgical mask
  • Masks of [[Cameroon]]
  • Anonymous]]'' wear Guy Fawkes masks while protesting against the [[Church of Scientology]], 2008, London
  • Vietnamese young people wear surgic masks after the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]
  • Makeup simulates a half-sided mask on this man for [[Halloween]]
  • The so-called '[[Mask of Agamemnon]]', a 16th-century BC mask discovered by [[Heinrich Schliemann]] in 1876 at [[Mycenae]], Greece, [[National Archaeological Museum, Athens]]
  • Mask of Shame]]"
  • Roman mosaic]], second century AD
  • [[Funeral mask]] of [[K'inich Janaab' Pakal]] at the [[National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)]]
  • reusable filter mask]] worn by [[NYPD]] officer
  • Greek mask
  • Three photographs of the same [[noh]] mask of a woman show how her expression appears to change with a tilting of the head of the performer - to demonstrate the effect, the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting and only the camera was moved
  • Masked dancers at a [[tshechu]] festival, [[Bhutan]], 2013
  • A Venetian carnival mask
  • Aztec mask of [[Xiuhtecuhtli]], c. 1500, of [[Mixtec]]-Aztec provenance
  • Mask of [[Tengu]]
  • Shu]]
ANY FULL OR PARTIAL FACE COVERING, WHETHER CEREMONIAL, PROTECTIVE, DECORATIVE, OR USED AS DISGUISE
Masks; Masked; Masks (protective); Protective masks; Protective mask; Masks in theatre; Masks and theatre; Masks in ritual; Masks in ritual and theatre; Masks in theater and ritual; Ritual mask; SARS mask; SARS Masks; Swine flu mask; Theatre mask; Tribal mask; Flu mask; Face cover; Melanesian masks; Native American masks; SARS Mask; Face covering; Masked theatre
·noun A screen for a battery.
II. Mask ·add. ·noun The head or face of a fox.
III. Mask ·vi To take part as a masker in a masquerade.
IV. Mask ·vi To wear a mask; to be disguised in any way.
V. Mask ·noun That which disguises; a pretext or subterfuge.
VI. Mask ·add. ·noun A person wearing a mask; a masker.
VII. Mask ·noun In a permanent fortification, a redoubt which protects the caponiere.
VIII. Mask ·vt To Conceal; also, to intervene in the line of.
IX. Mask ·noun The lower lip of the larva of a dragon fly, modified so as to form a prehensile organ.
X. Mask ·vt To Disguise; to Cover; to Hide.
XI. Mask ·vt To cover, as the face, by way of concealment or defense against injury; to conceal with a mask or visor.
XII. Mask ·noun A dramatic performance, formerly in vogue, in which the actors wore masks and represented mythical or allegorical characters.
XIII. Mask ·noun A cover, or partial cover, for the face, used for disguise or protection; as, a dancer's mask; a fencer's mask; a ball player's mask.
XIV. Mask ·noun A festive entertainment of dancing or other diversions, where all wear masks; a masquerade; hence, a revel; a frolic; a delusive show.
XV. Mask ·vt To cover or keep in check; as, to mask a body of troops or a fortess by a superior force, while some hostile evolution is being carried out.
XVI. Mask ·noun A grotesque head or face, used to adorn keystones and other prominent parts, to spout water in fountains, and the like;
- called also mascaron.
mask         
  • An American football player wearing a mask that protects his face from another player's hand
  • A Korean mask worn by a [[Talchum]] performer
  • A protective surgical mask
  • Golden masks excavated from the [[Kalmakareh Cave]] in [[Lorestan]], Iran, first half of first Millennium BC, [[National Museum of Iran]]
  • Asaro mudman]] holding mask, Papua New Guinea
  • recognition]]
  • A [[Peking opera]] mask
  •  access-date = February 26, 2016}}</ref>
  • Batak]] mask dance at a funeral feast in the [[Dutch East Indies]], 1930s
  • Kwakwaka'wakw ritual mask (painted wood, fiber, and cord)
  • Fang mask]] used for the ''ngil'' ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers. Wood, [[Gabon]], 19th century
  • Iranian surgical technologist with surgical mask
  • Masks of [[Cameroon]]
  • Anonymous]]'' wear Guy Fawkes masks while protesting against the [[Church of Scientology]], 2008, London
  • Vietnamese young people wear surgic masks after the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]
  • Makeup simulates a half-sided mask on this man for [[Halloween]]
  • The so-called '[[Mask of Agamemnon]]', a 16th-century BC mask discovered by [[Heinrich Schliemann]] in 1876 at [[Mycenae]], Greece, [[National Archaeological Museum, Athens]]
  • Mask of Shame]]"
  • Roman mosaic]], second century AD
  • [[Funeral mask]] of [[K'inich Janaab' Pakal]] at the [[National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)]]
  • reusable filter mask]] worn by [[NYPD]] officer
  • Greek mask
  • Three photographs of the same [[noh]] mask of a woman show how her expression appears to change with a tilting of the head of the performer - to demonstrate the effect, the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting and only the camera was moved
  • Masked dancers at a [[tshechu]] festival, [[Bhutan]], 2013
  • A Venetian carnival mask
  • Aztec mask of [[Xiuhtecuhtli]], c. 1500, of [[Mixtec]]-Aztec provenance
  • Mask of [[Tengu]]
  • Shu]]
ANY FULL OR PARTIAL FACE COVERING, WHETHER CEREMONIAL, PROTECTIVE, DECORATIVE, OR USED AS DISGUISE
Masks; Masked; Masks (protective); Protective masks; Protective mask; Masks in theatre; Masks and theatre; Masks in ritual; Masks in ritual and theatre; Masks in theater and ritual; Ritual mask; SARS mask; SARS Masks; Swine flu mask; Theatre mask; Tribal mask; Flu mask; Face cover; Melanesian masks; Native American masks; SARS Mask; Face covering; Masked theatre
¦ noun
1. a covering for all or part of the face, worn as a disguise, for protection or hygiene, or for theatrical effect.
a respirator used to filter inhaled air or to supply gas for inhalation.
a face pack.
2. a likeness of a person's face moulded or sculpted in clay or wax.
the face or head of an animal, especially of a fox, as a hunting trophy.
3. a disguise or pretence: she let her mask of respectability slip.
4. Photography a piece of material used to cover part of an image that is not required when exposing a print.
5. Electronics a patterned metal film used in the manufacture of microcircuits to allow selective modification of the underlying material.
¦ verb
1. cover with a mask.
2. conceal from view; disguise: brandy did not mask the bitter taste.
3. cover so as to protect during a particular process, especially painting.
Derivatives
masked adjective
masker noun
Origin
C16: from Fr. masque, from Ital. maschera, mascara, prob. from med. L. masca 'witch, spectre', but influenced by Arab. mas?ara 'buffoon'.
Surgical mask         
  • Single-use medical masks
  • A medical professional wearing a surgical mask during an operation
  • A face mask with Disney characters, designed for children<ref>[https://www.hfmmagazine.com/articles/806-fda-clears-first-single-use-face-mask-for-children FDA clears first single-use face mask for children]; URL accessed 18 October 2020.</ref>
  • A supermarket shopper wearing a face mask during the [[COVID-19 pandemic]].
  • Comparison of breathing out without (top) and with (bottom) a mask. Note that without a mask jets of air are exhaled that can carry viruses and bacteria rapidly towards a person in front of the person breathing out. But with a mask these jets are blocked, meaning the air instead mostly rises due to convection. Note that although jets are blocked, the same amount of air moves in both cases, allowing the wearer to breathe easily.
  • 2009 swine flu pandemic]].
ORO-NASAL COVER WORN BY HEALTH PROFESSIONALS TO REDUCE SPREAD OF AIRBORNE PATHOGENS
Surgical masks; Surgical facemasks; 😷; Surgical facemask; Medical procedure mask; Procedure mask; Laser surgical mask; Dental mask; Medical mask; Surgical face mask; Duckbill mask; COVID mask
A surgical mask, also known by other names such as a medical face mask or procedure mask, is a personal protective equipment used by healthcare professionals that serves as a mechanical barrier that interferes with direct airflow in and out of respiratory orifices (i.e.
mask         
  • An American football player wearing a mask that protects his face from another player's hand
  • A Korean mask worn by a [[Talchum]] performer
  • A protective surgical mask
  • Golden masks excavated from the [[Kalmakareh Cave]] in [[Lorestan]], Iran, first half of first Millennium BC, [[National Museum of Iran]]
  • Asaro mudman]] holding mask, Papua New Guinea
  • recognition]]
  • A [[Peking opera]] mask
  •  access-date = February 26, 2016}}</ref>
  • Batak]] mask dance at a funeral feast in the [[Dutch East Indies]], 1930s
  • Kwakwaka'wakw ritual mask (painted wood, fiber, and cord)
  • Fang mask]] used for the ''ngil'' ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers. Wood, [[Gabon]], 19th century
  • Iranian surgical technologist with surgical mask
  • Masks of [[Cameroon]]
  • Anonymous]]'' wear Guy Fawkes masks while protesting against the [[Church of Scientology]], 2008, London
  • Vietnamese young people wear surgic masks after the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]
  • Makeup simulates a half-sided mask on this man for [[Halloween]]
  • The so-called '[[Mask of Agamemnon]]', a 16th-century BC mask discovered by [[Heinrich Schliemann]] in 1876 at [[Mycenae]], Greece, [[National Archaeological Museum, Athens]]
  • Mask of Shame]]"
  • Roman mosaic]], second century AD
  • [[Funeral mask]] of [[K'inich Janaab' Pakal]] at the [[National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)]]
  • reusable filter mask]] worn by [[NYPD]] officer
  • Greek mask
  • Three photographs of the same [[noh]] mask of a woman show how her expression appears to change with a tilting of the head of the performer - to demonstrate the effect, the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting and only the camera was moved
  • Masked dancers at a [[tshechu]] festival, [[Bhutan]], 2013
  • A Venetian carnival mask
  • Aztec mask of [[Xiuhtecuhtli]], c. 1500, of [[Mixtec]]-Aztec provenance
  • Mask of [[Tengu]]
  • Shu]]
ANY FULL OR PARTIAL FACE COVERING, WHETHER CEREMONIAL, PROTECTIVE, DECORATIVE, OR USED AS DISGUISE
Masks; Masked; Masks (protective); Protective masks; Protective mask; Masks in theatre; Masks and theatre; Masks in ritual; Masks in ritual and theatre; Masks in theater and ritual; Ritual mask; SARS mask; SARS Masks; Swine flu mask; Theatre mask; Tribal mask; Flu mask; Face cover; Melanesian masks; Native American masks; SARS Mask; Face covering; Masked theatre
(masks, masking, masked)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
A mask is a piece of cloth or other material, which you wear over your face so that people cannot see who you are, or so that you look like someone or something else.
The gunman, whose mask had slipped, fled.
...actors wearing masks.
N-COUNT
2.
A mask is a piece of cloth or other material that you wear over all or part of your face to protect you from germs or harmful substances.
You must wear goggles and a mask that will protect you against the fumes...
N-COUNT: oft supp N
3.
If you describe someone's behaviour as a mask, you mean that they do not show their real feelings or character.
His mask of detachment cracked, and she saw for an instant an angry and violent man.
N-COUNT: oft N of n
4.
A mask is a thick cream or paste made of various substances, which you spread over your face and leave for some time in order to improve your skin.
This mask leaves your complexion feeling soft and supple.
N-COUNT
5.
If you mask your feelings, you deliberately do not show them in your behaviour, so that people cannot know what you really feel.
Dena lit a cigarette, trying to mask her agitation.
= conceal, hide
VERB: V n
6.
If one thing masks another, it prevents people from noticing or recognizing the other thing.
Too much salt masks the true flavour of the food...
VERB: V n
7.
Goaltender mask         
  • A baseball catcher wearing a mask modeled after the goaltender mask.
  • Clint Benedict, shown in 1923, became the first ice hockey goalie to wear facial protection in a game in 1930.
  • Canadian Inventor [[Brian Heaton]] helped inspire the basis for "cateye" cages in use by goalies today
  • shot on goal]] from [[Bryan Rust]].
  • [[Jacques Plante]]'s original fiberglass mask, first used on November 1, 1959
  • [[Boston Bruins]] goaltender [[Tuukka Rask]] with a full fiberglass/birdcage combination goaltender mask
MASK WORN BY GOALTENDERS IN ICE HOCKEY
Hockey mask; Goalie mask; Ice hockey goaltender helmet
A goaltender mask, commonly referred to as a goalie mask, is a mask worn by goaltenders in a variety of sports to protect the head and face from injury from the ball or puck, as they constantly face incoming shots on goal. Some sports requiring their use include ice hockey, lacrosse, inline hockey, field hockey, rink hockey, ringette, bandy, rinkball, broomball, and floorball.
Antimask         
  • Seattle police officers wearing gauze masks in December 1918, during the Spanish flu pandemic
RELUCTANCE OR HESITANCY OF WEARING A FACE MASK AS A MEANS OF PROTECTION AGAINST VIRUSES
Mask shaming; Maskshaming; Anti-masker; User:PatriceMO1/Mask refusal; Anti-mask; Anti-maskers; Antimask; Antimasker; Mask refusal
·noun A secondary mask, or grotesque interlude, between the parts of a serious mask.

Википедия

Death mask

A death mask is a likeness (typically in wax or plaster cast) of a person's face after their death, usually made by taking a cast or impression from the corpse. Death masks may be mementos of the dead, or be used for creation of portraits. It is sometimes possible to identify portraits that have been painted from death masks because of the characteristic slight distortions of the features caused by the weight of the plaster during the making of the mould.

The main purpose of the death mask from the Middle Ages until the 19th century was to serve as a model for sculptors in creating statues and busts of the deceased person. Not until the 1800s did such masks become valued for themselves.

In other cultures a death mask may be a funeral mask, an image placed on the face of the deceased before burial rites, and normally buried with them. The best known of these are the masks used in ancient Egypt as part of the mummification process, such as Tutankhamun's mask, and those from Mycenaean Greece such as the Mask of Agamemnon.

In some European countries, it was common for death masks to be used as part of the effigy of the deceased, displayed at state funerals; the coffin portrait was an alternative. Mourning portraits were also painted, showing the subject lying in repose. During the 18th and 19th centuries masks were also used to permanently record the features of unknown corpses for purposes of identification. This function was later replaced by post-mortem photography.

In the cases of people whose faces were damaged by their death, it was common to take casts of their hands. An example of this occurred in the case of Thomas D'Arcy McGee, the Canadian statesman whose face was shattered by the bullet which was used to assassinate him in 1868.

When taken from a living subject, such a cast is called a life mask. Proponents of phrenology used both death masks and life masks for pseudoscientific purposes.