Pronunciation: /æbˈstruːsɪti/
noun the quality of being difficult to understand or comprehend
A1 The teacher explained the concept in a way that even the A1 students could understand, avoiding abstrusity.
A2 The A2 students struggled with the abstrusity of the scientific article they were asked to read.
B1 The B1 level course introduced students to the abstrusity of philosophical texts.
B2 The B2 students were able to grasp the abstrusity of the legal document due to their advanced language skills.
C1 The C1 students were unfazed by the abstrusity of the mathematical theorem they were studying.
C2 The C2 students were able to appreciate the abstrusity of the abstract artwork displayed in the gallery.
formal The professor's lecture on quantum physics was filled with abstrusity, leaving many students confused.
informal I tried reading that scientific paper, but the abstrusity of the language made my head hurt.
slang I can't follow the abstrusity of this math problem, it's too complicated.
figurative The abstrusity of her emotions made it hard for him to understand her true feelings.
abstrusified
abstrusities
more abstruse
most abstruse
abstrusifies
will abstrusify
has abstrusified
is abstrusifying
abstrusity
abstruse
to abstrusify
abstrusifying
abstrusified