acroatic
1Acroatic — Ac ro*at ic, a. [Gr. ?, fr. ? to hear.] Same as {Acroamatic}. [1913 Webster] …
2acroatic — index esoteric, inapprehensible, incomprehensible, inexplicable, learned, profound (esoteric) Burton s Legal Thesaurus …
3acroatic — adjective /ˌækɹəʊˈætɪk/ acroamatic<ref name= OED /> The poet Thomas Gray said that reading Aristotle was like eating dried hay. This is something of an exaggeration, but his writing can be hard work. It is generally agreed that these… …
4acroatic — a. See acroamatic …
5acroatic — …
6Aristotle — • Philosopher, born at Stagira, a Grecian colony in the Thracian peninsula Chalcidice, 384 B.C.; died at Chalcis, in Euboea, 322 B.C Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Aristotle Aristotle …
7acroatics — noun /ˌækɹəʊˈætɪks/ acroamatics<ref name= OED >“[ …
8esoteric — I adjective abstruse, acroamatic, acroamatical, acroatic, arcane, cabalistic, cabalistical, concealed, confidential, confined to a select circle, covert, cryptic, deep, designed for the initiated, difficult to comprehend, enigmatic, enigmatical,… …
9inapprehensible — I adjective abstruse, acroamatic, acroamatical, acroatic, ambiguous, beyond comprehension, beyond understanding, enigmatic, enigmatical, hidden, impenetrable, impossible to understand, incognizable, incomprehensible, indistinct, inexplicable,… …
10incomprehensible — I adjective abstruse, acroamatic, acroamatical, acroatic, ambiguous, beyond comprehension, concealed, dark, deep, difficult to comprehend, dim, enigmatic, enigmatical, esoteric, fathomless, hard to understand, hidden, impenetrable, impossible to… …