obscurity

英[əb'skjʊərəti] 美[əb'skjʊrəti]
  • n. 昏暗;晦涩;不出名;不明
obscurities
TEM8 GRE
    n. (名词)
    1. 朦胧
    2. 晦涩
    3. 无名的人
    4. 难解
    5. 隐匿
    6. 不引人注目
    7. 卑微者
    8. 不明
    9. 含糊
    10. 暗(淡)
    11. 暧昧
    12. 难解处
    13. 不明处
    14. 费解的话
    15. 低微的人
    16. 混沌
    17. 蒙昧
    18. 朦胧状态
    19. 幽晦

英英释义

Noun:
  1. the quality of being unclear or abstruse and hard to understand

  2. an obscure and unimportant standing; not well known;

    "he worked in obscurity for many years"

  3. the state of being indistinct or indefinite for lack of adequate illumination

1. His prose is vigorous and dense, occasionally to the point of obscurity.
他的散文文笔有力、内容庞杂,有时几近晦涩。

来自柯林斯例句

2. The actress was only 17 when she was plucked from obscurity and made a star.
这个演员受到提携从无名少女一跃成为明星时年仅17岁。

来自《权威词典》

3. The obscurity of the passage makes several interpretations possible.
这段文字隐晦,因而有可能作出好几种解释.

来自《现代汉英综合大词典》

4. "How can that be?" asked Hunt, irritated by the obscurity of Henry's reply.
“怎么会那样呢?”亨特问道,亨利含糊费解的回答让他恼火。

来自柯林斯例句

5. Gino clawed his way out of underworld obscurity to become a millionaire hotelier.
吉诺从底层社会的无名小卒一步步奋斗成为拥有百万家财的酒店大亨。

来自柯林斯例句

    用作名词 (n.)
    1. It's all behind me now, occulted in obscurity.
      这些东西都已经被我丢在身后了,退隐入迷雾之中。
    2. His poems are full of obscurities.
      他的诗作有很多晦涩难解的地方。
    3. Letitia pondered on an obscurity in these words.
      利蒂霞思索着这些话中的费解之处。
    4. Many great men rose from obscurity to fame.
      许多伟人都是从卑微变得有名望的。
    5. He spent most of his life working in obscurity.
      他在默默无闻的工作中度过了大半生。
    6. Its origin is lost in obscurity.
      它的起源己搞不清楚了。
    7. The course teaches students to avoid ambiguity and obscurity of expression.
      这门课程教学生避免表达上的模棱两可、含混不清。