irrecondite

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English

Etymology

From ir- +‎ recondite.

Adjective

irrecondite (comparative more irrecondite, superlative most irrecondite)

  1. Not recondite; well-known.
    • 1805, John Mason Good, “Appendix”, in Titus Lucretius Carus, translated by John Mason Good, The Nature of Things: A Didactic Poem. , volume I, London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, , →OCLC, page cvi:
      [] Socrates [] was rather a moral and political, than a physical or metaphysical philosopher; and hence his creed was either deficient upon the subject of cosmology, or too simple and irrecondite to satisfy the curiosity of his pupils.
    • 1834, John Mason Good, Nature of the Animate World, page 336:
      ..than institutions of another class were found wanting: — a something that might fill up the space between the cloistered scholar and the irrecondite citizen ; the...
    • 1840, Sylvanus Urban , The Gentleman’s Magazine, and Historical Chronicle, page 236:
      Let me see nothing too trim, nothing too irrecondite. Equal solicitude is not to be exerted on all ideas alike: some are brought into the fullness of light, some are

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