obscure

தெளிவற்ற
definition
verb
gray clouds obscure the sun
keep from being seen; conceal.
adjective
his origins and parentage are obscure
not discovered or known about; uncertain.
translation of 'obscure'
இருளுடைய
adjective
பகையார்ந்த
example
Taylor's one of those crazy people with a humanities minor and is always making 'obscure' references that I don't get.
For reasons that are 'obscure' and mysterious to nobody but a three-day-old child, the former culture minister was this week informed his desk was in the lift and that he was now free to spend more time with his record collection.
Individualistic and even idiosyncratic as Badri's style can be, no viewer can complain that his paintings are 'obscure' or difficult to understand.
If the communication gap is too wide, the message is too 'obscure' for people to understand.
I tend to forget some 'obscure' titles on albums I rarely play.
Even now my restless eyes will settle on its surface and pause, as if some mystery, still 'obscure' , might be solved.
It tends to 'obscure' the problem rather than highlight it, because we do not try and suggest that a company becomes a trustee for the creditors upon the winding-up.
They can 'obscure' the issues rather than providing clarification.
In this context, it's a terrible shame that Strange Gardens, even though based on a true incident, only serves to 'obscure' those difficult matters all over again.
In the voice, words are flooded with soulful intentionality; the soul emerges briefly from the 'obscure' corporeal dark and is suddenly there.
To reach a younger demographic, Jensen and his ilk are eschewing mainstream acts and building brand identity with cutting-edge, forgotten, and 'obscure' music.
A set of trimmer figures and new tattoos show a band that's been sharpened by extended tours of an 'obscure' but adoring and importantly, swelling international circuit.
Keep the meaning 'obscure' , and you keep the mystery intact.
This section is disjointed, much is left unexplained, and Brooks uses many 'obscure' local references.
The outback has a colourful and fascinating history that is often 'obscure' or unknown to many people.
They have not hint of ‘an 'obscure' self that is forgotten underneath’.
Thick, grey, rain-laden clouds 'obscure' the warm morning sun, casting a certain dreariness upon the land of Myrmar below.
Most of these people are scared stiff of entering the political arena on their own but eager to do so hidden under some 'obscure' umbrella.
But the option is there, and it is clear that ministers, from the Prime Minister down - though Mr Jones's position is still 'obscure' - still genuinely think this is a possibility.
But somehow, in the process of cultural production, some 'obscure' , unnoticed, maybe even unconscious revolution took place.
In other words, it is possible for the profiling code to overshadow or 'obscure' a performance problem.
His use of 'obscure' jargon underscored the urgent need for secrecy and discretion.
However, in the following sections, we see that a minor slight of the American religious right by an 'obscure' professor has provoked an event of international outrage.
It's to Professor McWorter's credit that he developed the right idea from a vague representation of an 'obscure' intuition.
Still, this is a Frank Black album, with its 'obscure' references and abstruse lyrics.
Disillusioned and sickened, Balashov achieves salvation by joining the Skoptsy, an 'obscure' religious sect that existed until only a few decades ago.
With that in mind, which of the following 'obscure' , graduate-level references does Mead not use in the article?
When in such situations the essential basis of territorial sovereignty is lacking or confused, the situation is 'obscure' and uncertain from a legal point of view.
He heard about Bob from a patient who wore a unique gold design on a neck chain, one that Lovejoy recognized as a combination of two 'obscure' religious symbols.
I have this uncanny ability to recognise some of the most 'obscure' actors.
Credits: Google Translate