Uncompromising lectures on recondite topics have made TED a surprise internet hit.
From the guardian.co.uk
Highly literate, erudite, recondite while being pompous and self-aggranding.
From the guardian.co.uk
The recondite mazes of Cubism, so open, so impregnable, are what followed.
From the time.com
Monetary policy is the most recondite yet most pervasive and powerful of economic forces.
From the forbes.com
He is breezily readable where other studies can feel dense and recondite.
From the guardian.co.uk
It's the first gang, a minority, that imagines recondite defense schemes.
From the latimes.com
It may seem a recondite subject, but the stakes couldn't be higher.
From the economist.com
What exactly is NATO's interest in such a recondite tribal squabble?
From the time.com
The average person finds these gardens at first a little bit recondite, off the beaten path.
From the denverpost.com
More examples
Abstruse: difficult to penetrate; incomprehensible to one of ordinary understanding or knowledge; "the professor's lectures were so abstruse that students tended to avoid them"; "a deep metaphysical theory"; "some recondite problem in historiography"
(reconditeness) wisdom that is recondite and abstruse and profound; "the anthropologist was impressed by the reconditeness of the native proverbs"
Recondite (born Lorenz Brunner in Lower Bavaria) is a German musician, techno producer, label owner and sound artist.
Hidden from the mental or intellectual view; secret; abstruse; Dealing in things abstruse; profound; searching; Difficult to understand; known only by experts; Of a person: highly talented, a master of a field
Remote from easy perception; secret; hidden [L.- normal'>reconditus, pp. of recondere, put away]
Difficult to understand; abstruse. 2) concerned with obscure subject matter.
Rek en DIte having difficult subject matter us news