Synonym: dark, dim, faint, fuzzy, hazy, indefinite, indistinct, shadowy, unclear, vague. Antonym: clear. Similar words: obscurely, obscurity, obscene, discursive, sculpture, cure, cured, secure. Meaning: [əb'skjʊr /əb'skjʊə] v. 1. make less visible or unclear 2. make unclear, indistinct, or blurred 3. make obscure or unclear 4. make undecipherable or imperceptible by obscuring or concealing 5. make difficult to perceive by sight. adj. 1. not clearly understood or expressed 2. marked by difficulty of style or expression 3. difficult to find 4. not famous or acclaimed 5. not drawing attention 6. remote and separate physically or socially.
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61. He has traveled widely, lecturing on such obscure but important topics as cryptography, intellectual property and cognitive theory.
62. Policies emerge that are not merely compromises but also remain obscure on key points of implementation.
63. Truth is so obscure in these times, and falsehood so established, that, unless we love the truth, we cannot know it. Blaise Pascal
64. Its precise origins remain obscure; its ultimate impact on society is necessarily still a matter of conjecture.
65. Henry Fitzhugh aims for a deliberate mix of obscure or up-and-coming artists with the glitterati of the art world.
66. Duck sometimes has these patches obscure, when uniform face is best distinction from other two scoters.
67. Congress, of course, never intended to suspend $ 50 million dams to prolong the dubious existence of obscure fish.
68. For some obscure reason you had to be taken over.
69. But when a Duchess descends to mingle with a person of obscure birth, does she not then degrade herself?
70. And that faced her with a course of action which, for some obscure reason, seemed rather distasteful now.
71. The Vadiamians keep some open and make forays on to the surface for obscure sorts of research.
72. I also tried to be a little more obscure and interesting in my song selections.
73. Until the final stages of the war the future form of radical and socialist politics in Britain remained obscure.
74. The need for sigmoidoscopy in patients with obscure iron deficiency anaemia is contentious.
75. Of course employers can claim unawareness of obscure medical journals.
76. Perhaps this was deliberate(Sentencedict.com ), in order to obscure the prices which were as spectacular as the decor.
77. Many teachers try to obscure the fact that they are teaching in a multiracial school.
78. However, such simplistic answers often obscure rather more than they reveal.
79. You're not expected to input anything too obscure though, so frustrations in this respect are kept to a minimum.
80. Some other cellular event was involved, but its nature remained obscure and unexplained for another 30 years.
81. The obscure world of warfare between microbial species had suggested some promising substances, but was even less successful than chemotherapy.
82. About the most obscure thing touted is the fountain in Fountain Hills.
83. Time has since overlaid this corpus with errors that obscure what the original patriarchs taught to their descendants.
84. At night, it was so impressive when there were no clouds to obscure the countryside below.
85. Once an obscure backwater of the publishing business, computer books have gone mainstream.
86. The lines were written by an obscure English poet named Mordaunt.
87. This bureaucracy, for reasons still obscure, had decided that my posture was a disgrace and had to be corrected.
88. His book had to be published by the obscure Middle Passage Press.
89. There were no institutions of higher learning except for an obscure agricultural college in Mogilev province.
90. These movements and earlier erosion have tended to obscure Mesozoic and Paleozoic structures.
More similar words: obscurely, obscurity, obscene, discursive, sculpture, cure, cured, secure, epicure, uncured, sinecure, abscond, subscribe, subscriber, subscribe to, rescue, scuffle, scuttle, biscuit, discuss, rescued, observe, obsolete, emasculate, discussion, observed, observer, obstacle, obsessed, promiscuous.