obscure

[US]/əbˈskjʊə(r)/
[UK]/əbˈskjʊr/
Frequency: Very High

Translation

adj. unknown; not well-known
v. to conceal; make difficult to understand or perceive

Phrases & Collocations

obscure meaning

obscure language

obscure reference

obscure origin

obscure artist

obscure glass

Example Sentences

to obscure the truth

Real-world Examples

Clouds were obscuring the moon completely.

Source: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban

Yes. Jonathan Gruber was pretty obscure until recently.

Source: NPR News November 2014 Compilation

A red carpet now obscures exquisite floor mosaics.

Source: The Economist - Comprehensive

And the rhetorical battle obscures important areas of agreement.

Source: The Economist - Comprehensive

But even this weakened sunlight is often obscured for days by enormous dust storms.

Source: Kurzgesagt science animation

No matter how heavy the clouds may be, they can't obscure this phenomenon.

Source: Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (Original Version)

Whenever you run into it, it always obscures the truth.

Source: Modern University English Intensive Reading (2nd Edition) Volume 3

All these stuffy old white guys with their treatises and obscure terminologies.

Source: TED Talks (Video Version) Bilingual Selection

For comparison, a planet the size of Jupiter would only obscure the star by just 1%.

Source: Realm of Legends

He grew the bushy black beard that obscured his face.

Source: TED Talks (Audio Version) May 2016 Collection

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