For ... obscure reason• My colleagues and I will vote against the Bill, and not for any obscure reason.• Archer understood that he ran the risk of having his mandatewithdrawn, and for some obscure reason he disliked the prospect.• Occasionally, for some obscure reason of her own, Elinor was pleasant.• And that faced her with a course of action which, for some obscure reason, seemed rather distasteful now.• For some obscure reason you had to be taken over.
obscure2 ●○○ verb [transitiveT]
1UNDERSTANDto make something difficult to know or understand 搞混,使难理解
Recent successes have obscured the fact that the company is still in trouble.
近来的成功掩盖了公司依然处于困境的事实。
2CLEAR/EASY TO SEEto prevent something from being seen or heard clearly 遮蔽;使朦胧;使听不清
obscure• That banneradobscured an ad on the Time site for PointCast, which competes with NewsPage.• Everything upon which her eyes focused was obscured by a heavyveil.• Parts of the coast were obscured by fog.• If the finger is used, the image is partly obscured by the hand.• Soon, they would catch up with the sun and obscure it.• The staining frequently obscured the nucleus making assessment of the presence of nuclear staining difficult.• Fitfulclouds were beginning to obscure the sun.• It must be redesigned so that it illuminates the choices facing the country - not, as now, obscures them.• Despite the obscuring veil of time, many researchers can make out the traces of the Supercontinent Cycle in the Precambrian.
obscured the fact• The authors say the argument has obscured the fact that, under either financing plan, there will be a fundinggap.• Second, the furoreobscured the fact that Velikovsky was making an important point: catastrophes have occurred in the past.