obscure
[ uhb-skyoor ]
/ əbË?skyÊÉr /
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adjective, ob·scur·er, ob·scur·est.
verb (used with object), ob·scured, ob·scur·ing.
noun
OTHER WORDS FOR obscure
4 blurred, veiled.
OPPOSITES FOR obscure
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Origin of obscure
First recorded in 1350â1400; Middle English, from Old French oscur, obscur, from Latin obscÅ«rus âdarkâ
synonym study for obscure
historical usage of obscure
The adjective obscure first appears in English about 1425 (if not earlier); the verb appears around the same time. The adjective obscure comes from Anglo-French and Middle French oscur, obscur âwithout light, dark (in color), hard to understand,â from Latin obscÅ«rus âdim, dark, dingy, faint,â an adjective made up of the prefix ob- âtoward, againstâ and the adjective scÅ«rus, which does not occur in Latin.
The verb obscure may simply derive from the English adjective by functional shift (a change in the grammatical function of a word). Alternatively, the verb may derive from Middle French obscurer âto make or become darkâ or from Latin obscÅ«rÄ?re âto cover, obscure, overshadow, conceal,â a verb derived from obscÅ«rus.
The unrecorded Latin adjective scÅ«rus comes from the Proto-Indo-European root (s)keu-, (s)kÅ«- (with variants) âto cover, envelopâ ( scÅ«rus therefore means âcovered overâ). In Germanic the variant skeu- forms the base of the noun skeujam âcloud cover, cloud,â becoming skyÌ âcloudâ in Old Norse, which is the immediate source of English sky (a 13th-century borrowing). The variant skÅ«- forms the noun skÅ«maz âscumâ (because it covers the water), which becomes scum in English.
The verb obscure may simply derive from the English adjective by functional shift (a change in the grammatical function of a word). Alternatively, the verb may derive from Middle French obscurer âto make or become darkâ or from Latin obscÅ«rÄ?re âto cover, obscure, overshadow, conceal,â a verb derived from obscÅ«rus.
The unrecorded Latin adjective scÅ«rus comes from the Proto-Indo-European root (s)keu-, (s)kÅ«- (with variants) âto cover, envelopâ ( scÅ«rus therefore means âcovered overâ). In Germanic the variant skeu- forms the base of the noun skeujam âcloud cover, cloud,â becoming skyÌ âcloudâ in Old Norse, which is the immediate source of English sky (a 13th-century borrowing). The variant skÅ«- forms the noun skÅ«maz âscumâ (because it covers the water), which becomes scum in English.
OTHER WORDS FROM obscure
Words nearby obscure
obscene, obscenity, obscurant, obscurantism, obscuration, obscure, obscurity, obscurum per obscurius, obsecrate, obsequence, obsequent
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2021
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British Dictionary definitions for obscure
Derived forms of obscure
obscuration (ËÉbskjÊË?reɪÊ?Én), nounobscurely, adverbobscureness, nounWord Origin for obscure
C14: via Old French from Latin obscūrus dark
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
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