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Dictionary
obscurities
noun
Plural of obscurity
Exact(60)
OPERA LAFAYETTE Sometimes this intrepid company's wanderings through the thickets of the French operatic repertory can yield great pleasures, and sometimes they remind you that there are reasons obscurities are obscure.
There are no verbal flourishes of any kind, no self-preeningly long sentences and no self-conscious Joycean obscurities.
So far only two obscurities have declared themselves, a pizza mogul and a gay-rights activist.
He admits his obscurities and longueurs.
Yeats explained his own philosophy in the prose work A Vision (1925, revised version 1937); this meditation upon the relation between imagination, history, and the occult remains indispensable to serious students of Yeats despite its obscurities.
Thus, once the literary language and the various types of script have been mastered, the reader has immediate access to all literature of the 7th to the 20th centuries, though changes in style and vocabulary have left many obscurities in the earliest works.
But in a discipline sharing the imperfection and complexity of society itself, no such situation is attainable, and lawyers are consequently blamed for the basic difficulty of their craft which, it must be said, they sometimes compound by multiplying obscurities, contradictions, and complexities.
That there are deep obscurities in this program e.g., whether it is a matter of analyzing concepts or getting down to the simplest elements of things is less important in the present context than that analysis and synthesis were thus taken to be complementary.
During a course of lectures that Bridgman gave in 1914 on advanced electrodynamics, he was struck by the obscurities and ambiguities inherent in defining scientific ideas.
That's my current infection – that with the right apparatus, I can continue this adventure in finding out: it's not even looking for obscurities, it's looking for something that's tangible".
In the first, she dismisses a group including Jim Davidson, various silicone-chested obscurities, Evander Holyfield and that Socrates of pop music Lee Ryan as "inane, vain and terminally moronic".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com