esoteric
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++es·o·ter·ic /ˌesəˈterɪk◂, ˌiːsə-/ adjective FEW/NOT MANYknown and understood by only a few people who have special knowledge about something 深奥的,只有内行才懂的 the esoteric world of scientific supercomputing 深奥的科学超级计算领域 —esoterically /-kli/ adverb
Examples from the Corpus
esoteric• The Bible is no academic tome with an esoteric appeal to those with scholarly minds who can handle abstract concepts.• It simply feels good to gain even esoteric knowledge, and that is more than enough.• The efficacy of definitional overlap varies greatly across domains, such that specialist dictionaries may be required for more esoteric or specialist domains.• Kelly took dance out of the esoteric realm of swans and princes and tutus.• esoteric religious teachings• Pop art directly challenged what was increasingly seen as abstract art's esoteric retreat from the world.• It brings us into touch with levels of ourself untouched hitherto, and so it has a profound esoteric significance.• The number is highly significant in all esoteric teachings.• This, indeed, is the central truth which esoteric training seeks constantly to inculcate into the candidate for esoteric development.Origin esoteric (1600-1700) Greek esoterikos, from esotero “further inside”, from eiso “inside”es·o·ter·ic adjectiveChineseSyllable
and few only who a by Corpus have people understood known
esoteric
es‧o‧ter‧ic /ˌesəˈterɪk◂, ˌiːsə-/
adjective
the esoteric world of scientific supercomputing
—esoterically /-kli/ adverb
es‧o‧ter‧ic /ˌesəˈterɪk◂, ˌiːsə-/
adjective Date: 1600-1700
Language: Greek
Origin: esoterikos, from esotero 'further inside', from eiso 'inside'
known and understood by only a few people who have special knowledge about something:Language: Greek
Origin: esoterikos, from esotero 'further inside', from eiso 'inside'
—esoterically /-kli/ adverb