We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
Did you know? You can double click on a word to look it up on TermGallery.
Meanings of very abstruse in English
We have no meanings for "very abstruse" in our records yet.
Usage of very abstruse in English
1
He looked veryabstruse, rubbed his chin, and finally smiled after his fashion.
2
Expound to me, O grandsire, all this that seems to be veryabstruse.
3
But the symbolism is either veryabstruse or very doubtful.
4
This is a veryabstruse letter-doesyour head ache, Daddy?
5
The second line of 27 is veryabstruse.
6
Duration, time, and eternity, are, not without reason, thought to have something veryabstruse in their nature.
7
This is a veryabstruse verse.
8
These aphorisms are veryabstruse.
9
It's not veryabstruse, however.
10
Nor is abstraction a less human process, as if by becoming veryabstruse indeed we could hope to become divine.
11
He cast her a glance with the words that made her aware of a certain not veryabstruse meaning behind them.
12
He studied and worked out for himself veryabstruse questions, on which he formed his own opinions, usually with great sagacity.
13
A veryabstruse Piece; orthodox Lutheran-Calvinist, all proved from Scripture; giving what account it can of this unfathomable Universe, to the young mind.
14
I believe, that this proposition will not be thought to stand in need of any veryabstruse train of reasoning to support it.
15
They shrink from it as something veryabstruse, only fit for great scholars and divines, and almost given up now-a-days even by them.