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Discover Ludwig"obscure meaning" is a correct and usage phrase in written English.
You might use it when you want to describe a concept or phrase that is unclear in its meaning or intentions, or when you want to refer to a meaning that isn't easily understood. For example, "The politician's statement had an obscure meaning, and it was difficult to decipher his true intentions."
Exact(8)
Although, obviously, in the obscure meaning of the word "pensive", where it means "punchable" or "like a potato".
But it was Hindemith's setting of a text by Oskar Kokoschka, so one speaks instead of the "obscure meaning of the words".
After a good deal of spelling out, the ad-taker had it down, but announced that the Times couldn't take an ad "of such obscure meaning".
The dictionary still sits in our bookcase, and I still refer to it 10 to 15 times a year to look up an obscure meaning or solve an unusual crossword clue.
In a couple of pages, there's the sight of "cradles and pianos sailing along through the hills toward Loanda," a wonderful image for a panicky exit, and then a bizarre insistence that "explicadores de desenho" are design teachers and not plain drawing teachers, as though they might stand in for some obscure meaning -- those who explain the Grand Design, perhaps.
If the standard of sketches is a little variable, you try it; especially now that parliamentary language has de-evolved into an interminable string of jargon that is not only meaningless, but designed to obscure meaning while giving the appearance of meaning.
Similar(51)
Baker's own translations from German, French and Italian texts help clarify obscure meanings from source material for the stories.
It often uses more words than needed, obscures meaning, leads to ambiguity and misunderstanding, patronises and annoys people, helps makes public service ineffective and doesn't do your reputation any good.
Richard Franklin contends that on occasion surrealist writing obscures meaning, but in Asturias avoids this flaw.
The pieces are overly obscure in meaning.
"Shandy" is a word of obscure origin meaning "crack-brained, half-crazy".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com