Explain in detail:
Huì sè: The meaning is obscure. Difficult to understand: difficult to understand.
The last day of the lunar month and the day before the new moon: the new moon. Night: Twilight. The storm is gloomy. Vague: gloomy. Darkness.
Astringent: astringent (astringent) unsmooth, unsmooth: axis astringent. A taste that makes the tongue feel uncomfortable: bitterness. This persimmon is very astringent.
The obscure related sentences are as follows:
1. This article contains many technical terms, which make it difficult for students to understand.
There are too many technical terms in this report to understand.
In this way, there are inferior bad works and obscure critical articles everywhere.
4, the sky is the most versatile child I have ever seen, because it is unhappy, sometimes it is dark and obscure; Sometimes you just laugh like a flower when you get praise.
5. Explain difficult problems in obscure language and explain things that people don't understand with more difficult reasons.
6. He is not unknown! It's that your level of existence has not reached the level of understanding him.
7. This article abuses allusions, and some sentences are obscure to read.
8. Theoretical grammar explanation is obscure and difficult to remember, and it is even more difficult to use.
From obscure etymology to unusual dialect slang, from finding roommates to recommending restaurants, every teacher is very willing to help me and my classmates inside and outside the classroom.
10, the only real sanction against darkness is the more obscure darkness.
1 1. His article is vague and obscure, which makes people confused after reading it.
Synonym: crooked teeth
Describe the article full of uncommon words and obscure idioms: bow and scrape.
Explanation: bending: the same as "bending", tortuous, extended to unsmooth; Grit your teeth: it's awkward and awkward to read. The description text is obscure and difficult to understand and read.
Source: Tang Hanyu's Understanding of Learning: "Zhou Pan, twists and turns."
For example, when it was passed down to later generations, this Mandarin or Putonghua became an old saying. (Zhu Ziqing's Book of History, Volume III)