0 past simple and past participle of enshroud
2 to make something difficult to know or understand:
In the face of historical scrutiny the castrato will always remain somehow inscrutable, a figure enshrouded in mystery.
From the 1860s onwards the capital found itself regularly enshrouded in 'gritty black'.
Therefore, the basis on which massive decisions are made on the expenditure of more than £3,300 million will be enshrouded in uncertainty for a long time.
I do not think he realises the cruel position of these men, the terrible uncertainty in which their lives are enshrouded.
I believe that, at long last, real hope lightens the darkness which has enshrouded coal for so many weary and tormented years.
They are lawyers' law, very much so, and are enshrouded in technicalities.
We all know what it means, unlike, for example, subsidiarity, which is still enshrouded in every sort of mist.
The monument was enshrouded with flags, candles, flowers and other mementos.