- difficult to penetrate; incomprehensible to one of ordinary understanding or knowledge; "the professor's lectures were so abstruse that students tended to avoid them"; "a deep metaphysical theory"; "some recondite problem in historiography"
- (abstrusely) in a manner difficult to understand; "the professor's abstrusely reasoned theories were wasted on his students"
- (abstruseness) obscureness: the quality of being unclear or abstruse and hard to understand
- (abstruseness) reconditeness: wisdom that is recondite and abstruse and profound; "the anthropologist was impressed by the reconditeness of the native proverbs"
- Obscurantism (obscurantisme, from the Latin obscurans, “darkening”) is the practice of deliberately preventing the facts or the full details of some matter from becoming known. ...
- remote from apprehension; difficult to comprehend or understand; recondite; as in abstruse learning; concealed or hidden out of the way
- means "too difficult to understand for the average mind": The professor presented an abstruse metaphysical concept that went over our heads.
- (adj) - obscure, confusing, difficult
- دقیق ۔ مشکل ۔ باریک ۔ پیچیدہ ۔ گوڑھ ۔ گہرا
- difficult to understand
- (adj) difficult to understand. The professor's lecture was abstruse, i.e. it was as though his ideas were hidden away in the tons of his verbage and the average listener could not decipher them.