recondite

দুর্বোধ্য
definition
adjective
the book is full of recondite information
(of a subject or knowledge) little known; abstruse.
translation of 'recondite'
গূঢ়,
দুর্বোধ্য,
দুর্জ্ঞেয়,
দুরধিগম্য
adjective
দুর্বোধ্য,
গভীর,
গুপ্ত
example
Hellenistic literature displayed (sometimes in one and the same work) a mandarin artificiality full of 'recondite' , learned allusions and a lively, realistic interest in everyday life.
Hansen uses short sentences and has a knack for clarifying opaque and 'recondite' ideas.
Whether in science, philosophy, or religion, the use of 'recondite' terminology has a tendency to impede the dissemination of useful concepts and theories.
The 'recondite' topic of usury allowed Noonan to consider the problem of doctrinal development at greater length.
And if the model of critical practice sounds urbane, 'recondite' and not a little esoteric, it need not be dull.
I have known non-intellectual teachers and writers with a marvelous capacity for getting 'recondite' points across to the most obtuse student or reader.
It is a mine of interesting and 'recondite' information, written by the leading authorities in their fields.
The biographer's contextualising presence allows us to catch even the most 'recondite' allusion.
Feeling uncertain of his understanding of the mathematical concepts, he asked senior mathematicians to test his grasp of the more 'recondite' concepts.
He took his stories from writers more 'recondite' than Ovid and Livy, the sources for the painters of the Bourbon monarchy and the Napoleonic empire.
She metamorphosed into a highly intelligent woman who engaged the General on 'recondite' matters of French history and culture.
Bruce was a lively and fascinating speaker, with a huge fund of anecdotes and 'recondite' facts.
Imagery is of central importance to all three poets, and their use of images is daring, varied, and frequently 'recondite' .
Derrida burst on to the world stage in the 1960s with his 'recondite' theory known as deconstruction.
But if you dress up the idea in a forbidding vocabulary, full of neologisms and 'recondite' references to philosophy, then you may have a prescription for academic stardom.
His accompanying text may not answer every question on this 'recondite' subject.
Let's show the world that we can be lucid and enthusiastic explainers of 'recondite' ideas, not merely the flamboyant show-offs that unfair stereotypes so often paint us to be.
The Buddha's monks were not to speculate about the future or the past, or about such 'recondite' questions as the beginning or end of the world.
They must have found their teacher too sophisticated, too full of 'recondite' allusions for them to follow.
Such 'recondite' periphrasis brought its own reward.
Credits: Google Translate