1 not clear and difficult to understand or see:
2 to prevent something from being seen or heard:
Two new skyscrapers had sprung up, obscuring the view from her window.
Managers deliberately obscured the real situation from federal investigators.
an obscure 18th-century painter
4 unclear and difficult to understand or see:
The trials, too, which came and went, give the impression of a ' rise ' and then a ' decline ' of magic, obscuring its perennial and persistent nature.
To just lump them under an umbrella label of ' borrowing ' or ' calquing ' is an oversimplification which obscures the different possible historical scenarios for each case.
Thus, experimental effects on a highly sensitive and reliable measure may be obscured by averaging with less precise measures.
The former gave way to the system of recursive rewrite rules in the 1960s, obscuring the formal similarity of the two processes.
Such an apparently decisive choice of collective identity obscures the undercurrents of ideological struggle in the region.
Hence, although this view is a fundamental one of which experienced topos theorists are fully aware, it tends to get obscured in the exposition.
The sustained attention of constitutional scholars to constraints on state legislatures has obscured the ways delegates to constitutional conventions affirmed the prerogatives of the states.
However, this sectoral diversity obscures some politically salient concentrations.
中文繁体
不知名的, 無名的, 鮮為人知的…
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不知名的, 无名的, 鲜为人知的…
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poco conocido, poco claro, poco conocido/da [masculine-feminine…
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obscuro…
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世に知られていない, 分かりにくい…
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tanınmamış, pek bilinmeyen, anlaşılması güç…
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obscur/-ure, obscurcir, masquer…
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poc conegut, poc clar…
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