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obscure    音标拼音: [əbskj'ʊr]
a. 微暗的,难解的,含糊的,晦涩的,偏僻的,不著名的
vt. 使阴暗,隐藏,使含糊

微暗的,难解的,含糊的,晦涩的,偏僻的,不着名的使阴暗,隐藏,使含糊

obscure
adj 1: not clearly understood or expressed; "an obscure turn of
phrase"; "an impulse to go off and fight certain obscure
battles of his own spirit"-Anatole Broyard; "their
descriptions of human behavior become vague, dull, and
unclear"- P.A.Sorokin; "vague...forms of speech...have so
long passed for mysteries of science"- John Locke [synonym:
{obscure}, {vague}]
2: marked by difficulty of style or expression; "much that was
dark is now quite clear to me"; "those who do not appreciate
Kafka's work say his style is obscure" [synonym: {dark},
{obscure}]
3: difficult to find; "hidden valleys"; "a hidden cave"; "an
obscure retreat" [synonym: {hidden}, {obscure}]
4: not famous or acclaimed; "an obscure family"; "unsung heroes
of the war" [synonym: {obscure}, {unknown}, {unsung}]
5: not drawing attention; "an unnoticeable cigarette burn on the
carpet"; "an obscure flaw" [synonym: {obscure}, {unnoticeable}]
6: remote and separate physically or socially; "existed over the
centuries as a world apart"; "preserved because they
inhabited a place apart"- W.H.Hudson; "tiny isolated villages
remote from centers of civilization"; "an obscure village"
[synonym: {apart(p)}, {isolated}, {obscure}]
v 1: make less visible or unclear; "The stars are obscured by
the clouds"; "the big elm tree obscures our view of the
valley" [synonym: {obscure}, {befog}, {becloud}, {obnubilate},
{haze over}, {fog}, {cloud}, {mist}]
2: make unclear, indistinct, or blurred; "Her remarks confused
the debate"; "Their words obnubilate their intentions" [synonym:
{confuse}, {blur}, {obscure}, {obnubilate}]
3: make obscure or unclear; "The distinction was obscured" [synonym:
{obscure}, {bedim}, {overcloud}]
4: reduce a vowel to a neutral one, such as a schwa
5: make undecipherable or imperceptible by obscuring or
concealing; "a hidden message"; "a veiled threat" [synonym:
{obscure}, {blot out}, {obliterate}, {veil}, {hide}]

Obscure \Ob*scure"\ ([o^]b*sk[=u]r"), a. [Compar. {Obscurer}
([o^]b*sk[=u]r"[~e]r); superl. {Obscurest}.] [L. obscurus,
orig., covered; ob- (see {Ob-}) a root probably meaning, to
cover; cf. L. scutum shield, Skr. sku to cover: cf. F.
obscur. Cf. {Sky}.]
[1913 Webster]
1. Covered over, shaded, or darkened; destitute of light;
imperfectly illuminated; dusky; dim.
[1913 Webster]

His lamp shall be put out in obscure darkness.
--Prov. xx.
20.
[1913 Webster]

2. Of or pertaining to darkness or night; inconspicuous to
the sight; indistinctly seen; hidden; retired; remote from
observation; unnoticed.
[1913 Webster]

The obscure bird
Clamored the livelong night. --Shak.
[1913 Webster]

The obscure corners of the earth. --Sir J.
Davies.
[1913 Webster]

3. Not noticeable; humble; mean. "O base and obscure vulgar."
--Shak. "An obscure person." --Atterbury.
[1913 Webster]

4. Not easily understood; not clear or legible; abstruse or
incomprehensible; as, an obscure passage or inscription.
[1913 Webster]

5. Not clear, full, or distinct; clouded; imperfect; as, an
obscure view of remote objects.
[1913 Webster]

{Obscure rays} (Opt.), those rays which are not luminous or
visible, and which in the spectrum are beyond the limits
of the visible portion.
[1913 Webster]

Syn: Dark; dim; darksome; dusky; shadowy; misty; abstruse;
intricate; difficult; mysterious; retired; unnoticed;
unknown; humble; mean; indistinct.
[1913 Webster]


Obscure \Ob*scure"\ ([o^]b*sk[=u]r"), v. i.
To conceal one's self; to hide; to keep dark. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]

How! There's bad news.
I must obscure, and hear it. --Beau. & Fl.
[1913 Webster]


Obscure \Ob*scure"\, n.
Obscurity. [Obs.] --Milton.
[1913 Webster]


Obscure \Ob*scure"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Obscured}
([o^]b*sk[=u]rd"); p. pr. & vb. n. {Obscuring}.] [L.
obscurare, fr. obscurus: cf. OF. obscurer. See {Obscure}, a.]
To render obscure; to darken; to make dim; to keep in the
dark; to hide; to make less visible, intelligible, legible,
glorious, beautiful, or illustrious.
[1913 Webster]

They are all couched in a pit hard by Herne's oak, with
obscured lights. --Shak.
[1913 Webster]

Why, 't is an office of discovery, love,
And I should be obscured. --Shak.
[1913 Webster]

There is scarce any duty which has been so obscured by
the writings of learned men as this. --Wake.
[1913 Webster]

And seest not sin obscures thy godlike frame? --Dryden.
[1913 Webster]

420 Moby Thesaurus words for "obscure":
Cimmerian, abstruse, adiaphanous, adumbrate, aleatoric, aleatory,
ambiguous, amorphic, amorphous, amphibological, anarchic,
anonymous, apply to, arcane, around the bush, back of beyond,
baffling, baggy, bandage, beamless, beat about, becloud, beclouded,
bedarken, bedazzle, bedim, befog, befogged, beg the question,
begloom, belie, bemist, benight, beyond one, bicker, black,
black as night, black out, blacken, blanket, blear, bleared,
bleary, blind, blind the eyes, blindfold, blobby, block,
block the light, blot out, blur, blurred, blurry, boggle, broad,
brown, buried, caliginous, camouflage, canopy, cast a shadow,
cavil, chance, chancy, chaotic, characterless, choplogic,
clabber up, clear as mud, cloak, close, clothe, cloud, cloud over,
cloud up, clouded, cloudy, complex, complicate, complicated,
conceal, concealed, confuse, confused, confusing, cope, corrupt,
cover, cover up, covered, covert, cowl, crabbed, cramp, cryptic,
curtain, dark, dark as night, dark as pitch, darken, darken over,
darkling, darksome, daze, dazzle, deform, deprive of sight,
devious, difficult, dim, dim out, disguise, dismal, disorder,
disordered, disorderly, dissemble, distant, distort,
distract attention from, dodge, double-edged, double-faced,
doubtful, dubious, dull, dusk, dusky, ebon, ebony, eclipse,
eclipsed, encloud, encompass with shadow, enigmatic, enmist,
ensconce, enshroud, envelop, equivocal, equivocate, esoteric,
evade, evade the issue, excecate, faint, falsify, far, far-off,
featureless, feeble, fence, film, filmy, fog, fog up, foggy,
foreign, formless, fuliginous, fuzz, fuzzy, garble, garbled,
general, glare, gloom, gloomy, gloss over, gouge, grumly,
half-seen, half-visible, hard, hard to understand, haze, hazy,
hedge, hid, hidden, hide, hit-or-miss, hood, hoodwink, humble,
ignotus, ill-defined, illegible, impervious to light, imprecise,
in a cloud, in a fog, in eclipse, in purdah, in the wings,
inaccessible, inaccurate, inchoate, incoherent, incommunicado,
incomprehensible, inconclusive, inconsequential, inconspicuous,
indecisive, indefinable, indefinite, indeterminable, indeterminate,
indistinct, indistinguishable, inexact, inexplicable, inform,
inglorious, inscrutable, insignificant, intransparent, intricate,
jumble, jumbled, kaleidoscopic, keep from, keep under cover,
knotty, latent, lax, lay on, lay over, little known, lonesome,
loose, low-profile, lowly, lumpen, make blind, make uncertain,
make unintelligible, mantle, mask, mean, merely glimpsed, mess up,
minor, misadvise, misdirect, miseducate, misguide, misinform,
misinstruct, mislead, misrepresent, mist, misteach, misty, muddle,
muddy, muffle, murk, murky, mysterious, mystic, mystical, mystify,
mystifying, nameless, nebulous, night-black, night-clad,
night-cloaked, night-dark, night-enshrouded, night-filled,
night-mantled, night-veiled, nitpick, no credit to, nondescript,
nonspecific, nubilate, nubilous, obduce, obfuscate, obfuscated,
obnubilate, obscured, obumbrate, occult, occultate, occulted, odd,
opaque, orderless, out of focus, out-of-the-way, overcast,
overcloud, overlay, overshadow, oversmoke, overspread,
overtechnical, pale, palter, parry, perplexed, perplexing, pervert,
pick nits, pitch-black, pitch-dark, pitchy, prevaricate, pussyfoot,
put on, puzzling, quibble, random, rayless, recondite, remote,
removed, renownless, retired, roiled, roily, scramble, scrambled,
screen, scum, secluded, secluse, secret, semivisible, sequestered,
shade, shadow, shadowed forth, shadowy, shady, shapeless, shield,
shift, shroud, shuffle, shy, sidestep, slur over, smog, smoke,
snow-blind, solitary, somber, split hairs, spread over, starless,
stochastic, strange, strike blind, subfusc, sunless, superimpose,
superpose, sweeping, tenebrious, tenebrose, tenebrous,
tergiversate, tough, transcendent, turbid, umbral, uncelebrated,
uncertain, unclear, undefined, under an eclipse, under cover,
under house arrest, under wraps, underground, undestined,
undetermined, undistinguished, unemphatic, unfamed, unfamiliar,
unfathomable, unform, unglorified, unheard-of, unhonored,
unilluminated, unimportant, unintelligible, unknown, unlighted,
unlit, unnamed, unnotable, unnoted, unnoticeable, unnoticed,
unordered, unorganized, unplain, unpopular, unrecognizable,
unremarked, unrenowned, unshape, unspecified, unsung, vague,
varnish, veil, veiled, weak, whitewash, wrapped in clouds

"A Formal Description of the Specification Language OBSCURE",
J. Loeckx, TR A85/15, U Saarlandes, Saarbrucken, 1985.

[{Jargon File}]



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  • OBSCURE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
    The meaning of OBSCURE is dark, dim How to use obscure in a sentence Synonym Discussion of Obscure
  • OBSCURE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
    OBSCURE definition: 1 not known to many people: 2 not clear and difficult to understand or see: 3 to prevent… Learn more
  • OBSCURE Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
    Obscure definition: (of meaning) not clear or plain; ambiguous, vague, or uncertain See examples of OBSCURE used in a sentence
  • Obscure - Definition, Meaning Synonyms | Vocabulary. com
    If something is obscure, it's vague and hard to see Be careful if you're driving in heavy rain — the painted lines can be obscure Obscure comes from Latin obscurus, which can mean "dark, dim," "unclear, hard to understand," or "insignificant, humble "
  • OBSCURE definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
    Something that is obscure is difficult to understand or deal with, usually because it involves so many parts or details The contracts are written in obscure language Richard's statement was disgracefully obscure If one thing obscures another, it prevents it from being seen or heard properly
  • Obscure - definition of obscure by The Free Dictionary
    obscure - make less visible or unclear; "The stars are obscured by the clouds"; "the big elm tree obscures our view of the valley"
  • obscure - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
    Dark, faint or indistinct Hidden, out of sight or inconspicuous Difficult to understand; abstruse an obscure passage or inscription; The speaker made obscure references to little-known literary works The lock was of a kind that Watt could not pick Watt could pick simple locks, but he could not pick obscure locks
  • Obscure Definition Meaning | Britannica Dictionary
    OBSCURE meaning: 1 : not well-known not known to most people; 2 : difficult to understand likely to be understood by only a few people
  • OBSCURE Synonyms: 342 Similar and Opposite Words - Merriam-Webster
    Some common synonyms of obscure are ambiguous, cryptic, dark, enigmatic, equivocal, and vague While all these words mean "not clearly understandable," obscure implies a hiding or veiling of meaning through some inadequacy of expression or withholding of full knowledge
  • What does obscure mean? - Definitions. net
    What does obscure mean? This dictionary definitions page includes all the possible meanings, example usage and translations of the word obscure Dark, faint or indistinct Hidden, out of sight or inconspicuous Difficult to understand Etymology: From obscur, from obscurus, possibly, from ob +, from root scu, seen also in scutum; see scutum, sky





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