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词汇 obscurity
释义

Definition of obscurity in English:

obscurity

nounPlural obscurities əbˈskjʊərɪtiəbˈskjʊrədi
mass noun
  • 1The state of being unknown, inconspicuous, or unimportant.

    无名,默默无闻

    he is too good a player to slide into obscurity

    像他这样优秀的运动员是不会变得默默无闻的。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Office of Strategic Influence went from obscurity to infamy to oblivion during a spin cycle that lasted just seven days in late February.
    • Liverpool need to beat Portsmouth at home on Tuesday to halt the slide towards mid-table obscurity.
    • Our family in general isn't very close, so there's nothing I can really do about that, and I'm still waiting for the right lady to pluck me out of my obscurity.
    • Grenada's emergence from international obscurity was the culmination of four turbulent years of revolution and social experimentation.
    • The city's police began looking for Brown, but when early efforts did not yield success, the case began to slide into obscurity.
    • Here I am toiling away in relative obscurity in the land that time forgot, and you're bitching that you haven't got the time to write an article which would be printed in the New York Times?
    • Rather than following the standard rules of composition, the figures and objects appear to hang in obscurity, floating across a somber background.
    • The album and the artist slid into obscurity, forgotten by all but the few who stumbled across a copy in a dusty cellar.
    • The aplomb with which he emerged from that obscurity, manipulating the media with consummate skill, allowed the dissemination of Christ's message to gain a new momentum across the planet.
    • There being no second chamber in Holyrood, why not use Westminster as a kind of House of Lords, where former leaders can harmlessly serve out their twilight days in obscurity?
    • Whether or not it would break and send us back into complete obscurity it was unknown at the time - but we knew that this, this night was the beginning of something special.
    • Talking of slides into obscurity, William reports that the Socialist Workers Party, now admit to having little more than 3,000 members.
    • Amazing what an appearance on the Sunday morning shows does for your popularity - even though Mark would have preferred to see him languishing in obscurity.
    • But the film disappeared from sight after that viewing, sliding into complete obscurity and while I never forgot it I also never even learned its name.
    • There is a way out - retirement and self-imposed obscurity.
    • It's the salvation of a band nearly lost to sophomore obscurity; a rebirth made possible only through a stunning grasp for the humblest roots of American rock 'n' roll.
    • I was immortal then, a tiny speck in the grand scheme of things, someone who was to make a mark on the world and seemed to just let that mark slide away into obscurity.
    • Anxiousness sets in as the prospect of a government-funded retirement fades into obscurity and financial planning has suddenly become a reality.
    • Where fighting spirit is required in enormous quantities to avoid the inevitable slide into Nationwide League obscurity.
    • Anonymity refers to the apparent obscurity of the Net's users.
    Synonyms
    insignificance, inconspicuousness, unimportance, anonymity, lack of fame/renown/honour/recognition, non-recognition, ingloriousness, limbo, twilight, oblivion
    1. 1.1 The quality of being difficult to understand.
      晦涩,费解
      poems of impenetrable obscurity

      极其费解的诗。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • These large allegorical works, even when seen in person, present difficulties of access due to two sorts of obscurity.
      • Given the obscurity and perceived difficulty of his oeuvre, he is literature's white whale, Rosebud, and Bigfoot combined.
      • Given the extreme obscurity of the words used, and the sheer number of them, I have a hard time believing that these were words he came across in the course of his regular reading.
      • These are the lost poems of the lost modernist, David Jones, a man whose allusive obscurity won him fans like Eliot and Auden but robbed him of his place in college curricula.
      Synonyms
      incomprehensibility, impenetrability, unintelligibility, obscureness, complexity, intricacy, opacity, opaqueness, unclearness
      abstruseness, reconditeness, arcaneness, deepness, esotericism
    2. 1.2count noun A thing that is unclear or difficult to understand.
      晦涩,费解
      the obscurities in his poems and plays

      他的诗和戏剧中晦涩的词句。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Not for Duncan the abstractions and obscurities of academic Marxism.
      • But if you think a textbook should be generally free of significant obscurities and confusions, then it fails.
      • Thus, some obscurities and confusions in Chappell's account mirror the reality of the civil rights struggle itself.
      • The necessity for clarity of meaning for his listening public imposed a new discipline on both his poetry and prose pieces and this improved his work, exposing obscurities.
      • But even aside from obscurities in the notion of ‘the meaning’ of a predicate, this claim seems to me wrong.
      • It's eccentricity and garish wrapping make the album a supermarket standout but one wonders what motivates sunset strip rock stars produce such obscurities.
      • At the front of the line were the all-nighters, hard-core sci-fi fans, amateur Civil War historians, and chasers of obscurities, rumored to have been there since before midnight.
      • Balancing out the aforementioned examples of popular sentiment are a host of obscurities from various branches of urbane soul.
      • By the end of his book, Feiler is indulging in the same kind of circular obscurities that repel, rather than seduce, skeptics.
      • Time for more of the oddities, obscurities and outrageous offerings from the wonderful world wide web.
      • No more did wine wannabes have to resurrect their schoolboy French, or brave the obscurities of the appellation system to order a bottle of plonk.
      • We can put up with many obscurities and apparent irrelevancies, without assuming that this makes no sense.
      • The focus here is on the ‘incredibly strange and outsider’ realm, meaning that some extraordinary obscurities have already been made available.
      • We considered explanatory notes to be essential, to help the reader make sense of obscurities in the text and to see the quote in historical context.
      • He explained that Turner's ‘own special gift was that of expressing mystery and the obscurities rather than the definition of form’.
      • Tom Thorn is a Victoria writer who harbours an unnatural obsession with sports obscurities.
      • In addition to the footnotes that were provided in the original commentaries, the editors have clarified obscurities in their own footnotes.
      • They are placing astrology on the same level as fantasy, which makes their long-winded obscurities largely redundant.
      • In the end, however, one may wonder how far the various difficulties and obscurities surrounding what he writes on this score really impinge upon his fundamental aims.
      • The obscurities of literary theory are mercifully avoided, frequently by such witty contemporary reference and colloquial language which bring Shakespeare into the world of today's reader.
      Synonyms
      enigma, puzzle, mystery, difficulty, problem, complication, intricacy, ambiguity
      crux

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French obscurite, from Latin obscuritas, from obscurus 'dark'.

Rhymes

biosecurity, cybersecurity, futurity, immaturity, impurity, maturity, purity, security, surety

Definition of obscurity in US English:

obscurity

nounəbˈskjʊrədiəbˈskyo͝orədē
  • 1The state of being unknown, inconspicuous, or unimportant.

    无名,默默无闻

    he is too good a player to slide into obscurity

    像他这样优秀的运动员是不会变得默默无闻的。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Whether or not it would break and send us back into complete obscurity it was unknown at the time - but we knew that this, this night was the beginning of something special.
    • But the film disappeared from sight after that viewing, sliding into complete obscurity and while I never forgot it I also never even learned its name.
    • Talking of slides into obscurity, William reports that the Socialist Workers Party, now admit to having little more than 3,000 members.
    • Our family in general isn't very close, so there's nothing I can really do about that, and I'm still waiting for the right lady to pluck me out of my obscurity.
    • The aplomb with which he emerged from that obscurity, manipulating the media with consummate skill, allowed the dissemination of Christ's message to gain a new momentum across the planet.
    • It's the salvation of a band nearly lost to sophomore obscurity; a rebirth made possible only through a stunning grasp for the humblest roots of American rock 'n' roll.
    • The album and the artist slid into obscurity, forgotten by all but the few who stumbled across a copy in a dusty cellar.
    • Amazing what an appearance on the Sunday morning shows does for your popularity - even though Mark would have preferred to see him languishing in obscurity.
    • Grenada's emergence from international obscurity was the culmination of four turbulent years of revolution and social experimentation.
    • There being no second chamber in Holyrood, why not use Westminster as a kind of House of Lords, where former leaders can harmlessly serve out their twilight days in obscurity?
    • The city's police began looking for Brown, but when early efforts did not yield success, the case began to slide into obscurity.
    • Anxiousness sets in as the prospect of a government-funded retirement fades into obscurity and financial planning has suddenly become a reality.
    • Where fighting spirit is required in enormous quantities to avoid the inevitable slide into Nationwide League obscurity.
    • Liverpool need to beat Portsmouth at home on Tuesday to halt the slide towards mid-table obscurity.
    • The Office of Strategic Influence went from obscurity to infamy to oblivion during a spin cycle that lasted just seven days in late February.
    • Anonymity refers to the apparent obscurity of the Net's users.
    • Here I am toiling away in relative obscurity in the land that time forgot, and you're bitching that you haven't got the time to write an article which would be printed in the New York Times?
    • Rather than following the standard rules of composition, the figures and objects appear to hang in obscurity, floating across a somber background.
    • I was immortal then, a tiny speck in the grand scheme of things, someone who was to make a mark on the world and seemed to just let that mark slide away into obscurity.
    • There is a way out - retirement and self-imposed obscurity.
    Synonyms
    insignificance, inconspicuousness, unimportance, anonymity, lack of fame, lack of honour, lack of recognition, lack of renown, non-recognition, ingloriousness, limbo, twilight, oblivion
    1. 1.1 The quality of being difficult to understand.
      晦涩,费解
      poems of impenetrable obscurity

      极其费解的诗。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • These are the lost poems of the lost modernist, David Jones, a man whose allusive obscurity won him fans like Eliot and Auden but robbed him of his place in college curricula.
      • These large allegorical works, even when seen in person, present difficulties of access due to two sorts of obscurity.
      • Given the obscurity and perceived difficulty of his oeuvre, he is literature's white whale, Rosebud, and Bigfoot combined.
      • Given the extreme obscurity of the words used, and the sheer number of them, I have a hard time believing that these were words he came across in the course of his regular reading.
      Synonyms
      incomprehensibility, impenetrability, unintelligibility, obscureness, complexity, intricacy, opacity, opaqueness, unclearness
    2. 1.2 A thing that is unclear or difficult to understand.
      晦涩,费解
      the obscurities in his poems and plays

      他的诗和戏剧中晦涩的词句。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's eccentricity and garish wrapping make the album a supermarket standout but one wonders what motivates sunset strip rock stars produce such obscurities.
      • Not for Duncan the abstractions and obscurities of academic Marxism.
      • No more did wine wannabes have to resurrect their schoolboy French, or brave the obscurities of the appellation system to order a bottle of plonk.
      • The focus here is on the ‘incredibly strange and outsider’ realm, meaning that some extraordinary obscurities have already been made available.
      • Balancing out the aforementioned examples of popular sentiment are a host of obscurities from various branches of urbane soul.
      • At the front of the line were the all-nighters, hard-core sci-fi fans, amateur Civil War historians, and chasers of obscurities, rumored to have been there since before midnight.
      • The necessity for clarity of meaning for his listening public imposed a new discipline on both his poetry and prose pieces and this improved his work, exposing obscurities.
      • Thus, some obscurities and confusions in Chappell's account mirror the reality of the civil rights struggle itself.
      • In the end, however, one may wonder how far the various difficulties and obscurities surrounding what he writes on this score really impinge upon his fundamental aims.
      • We considered explanatory notes to be essential, to help the reader make sense of obscurities in the text and to see the quote in historical context.
      • But if you think a textbook should be generally free of significant obscurities and confusions, then it fails.
      • By the end of his book, Feiler is indulging in the same kind of circular obscurities that repel, rather than seduce, skeptics.
      • Tom Thorn is a Victoria writer who harbours an unnatural obsession with sports obscurities.
      • They are placing astrology on the same level as fantasy, which makes their long-winded obscurities largely redundant.
      • We can put up with many obscurities and apparent irrelevancies, without assuming that this makes no sense.
      • In addition to the footnotes that were provided in the original commentaries, the editors have clarified obscurities in their own footnotes.
      • He explained that Turner's ‘own special gift was that of expressing mystery and the obscurities rather than the definition of form’.
      • But even aside from obscurities in the notion of ‘the meaning’ of a predicate, this claim seems to me wrong.
      • Time for more of the oddities, obscurities and outrageous offerings from the wonderful world wide web.
      • The obscurities of literary theory are mercifully avoided, frequently by such witty contemporary reference and colloquial language which bring Shakespeare into the world of today's reader.
      Synonyms
      enigma, puzzle, mystery, difficulty, problem, complication, intricacy, ambiguity

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French obscurite, from Latin obscuritas, from obscurus ‘dark’.

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