recondite
21recondite — adj. [L. reconditus, put away, hidden] Concealed; remote from ordinary or easy perception; hidden …
22recondite — Synonyms and related words: abstract, abstruse, academic, arcane, beclouded, blind, buried, cabalistic, cabbalistic, close, clouded, concealed, covered, covert, cryptic, dark, deep, difficult, do up, doctor, eclipsed, enigmatic, erudite, esoteric …
23recondite — rec|on|dite [ rekən,daıt, rı kan,daıt ] adjective VERY FORMAL known or understood only by experts …
24recondite — rec·on·dite || rɪ kÉ‘ndaɪt , rekÉ™n /rɪ kÉ’n , rekÉ™n adj. profound, deep, difficult to comprehend; relatively unknown, obscure …
25recondite — [ rɛk(ə)ndʌɪt, rɪ kɒn ] adjective (of a subject or knowledge) obscure. Origin C17: from L. reconditus hidden, put away , past participle of recondere, from re back + condere put together, secrete …
26recondite — a. 1. Hidden, occult, dark, obscure, abstruse, transcendental, mystic, mystical, secret, concealed. 2. Profound, deep, abstruse …
27recondite — adj 1. difficult, hard, over one s head, Inf. tough; complex, complicated, perplexing, Inf. tricky; intricate, involved, tangled, knotty, crabbed. 2. profound, deep, esoteric, abstruse, abstract; impenetrable, incomprehensible, uncomprehensible,… …
28recondite — recon·dite …
29recondite — a. concealed; abstruse; erudite …
30recondite — adj. 1 (of a subject or knowledge) abstruse; out of the way; little known. 2 (of an author or style) dealing in abstruse knowledge or allusions; obscure. Derivatives: reconditely adv. reconditeness n. Etymology: L reconditus (as RE , conditus… …