How to use in-sentence of “obscure”:
+ The proverb “one furlong per fortnight” means to express something in as obscure and little-used units as possible.
+ His main instruments were various saxophones and clarinets, Carney also collected and played many instruments, often unusual or obscure ones.
+ Users of 2channel in particular have developed a wide variety of unique emoticons using obscure characters.
+ I think I’ll keep working on some obscure music pages as well.
+ His works contain complex, highly original, imaginationimaginative, and dense use of iconography, some of which was obscure even in his own time.
+ PROD is probably less likely to work here where there often won’t be anyone interested in rescuing obscure biographies.
+ The symbols used by symbolism are not the familiar emblems of mainstream iconography but intensely personal, private, obscure and ambiguous references.

Example sentences of “obscure”:
+ They were an obscure mountain tribe who came to power in Babylon after the collapse of the First Dynasty of Babylon in 1595 following a Hittite sack of the city, and became rulers of northern Babylonia.
+ However, if you are writing about a more obscure topic, then you may find that many of the editors have never previously heard of the thing you are writing about, and you should take this into account.
+ The Discord community of the search has also found other undocumented and/or obscure media of various genres.
+ One method, more obscure than most, is round half alternatingly.
+ They do not drill into obscure categories looking for things to improve.
+ Also, considering that the added a substantial amount of dubious information to articles on obscure voice actors, without “any” reliable sources, it is extremely difficult to ascertain the accuracy of the information.
+ Ditto articles on obscure Italian artists and art historians.
+ There is no idea too obscure or too small.
+ He is famous in legend as “the last king of the Goths.” In history he actually is an extremely obscure figure about whom little can be said with certainty but that he ruled part of Iberian PeninsulaIberia with opponents ruling the rest and was defeated and killed by invading conquered the entire peninsula.
+ Alternatively I’ve seen several articles for obscure artists that I would not consider “notable”.
+ Before long, other writers from across the pond such as Neil Gaiman, Peter Milligan and Grant Morrison were recruited to revamp obscure properties and tell new and interesting stories with an older audience in mind.
+ They were an obscure mountain tribe who came to power in Babylon after the collapse of the First Dynasty of Babylon in 1595 following a Hittite sack of the city, and became rulers of northern Babylonia.
+ However, if you are writing about a more obscure topic, then you may find that many of the editors have never previously heard of the thing you are writing about, and you should take this into account.
+ Straight pool is well known in the United States, Europe, Japan and the Philippines, but the game has become more obscure elsewhere.
+ This is a rather obscure song.
+ Hustler Duck is an obscure character that works as a marketing man.
+ Perhaps the most important issue to note, about complex templates, is the fact that the markup language is very reliable for complex template coding, even with complex calculations, so most template problems are often caused by obscure coding errors, rather than by bugs inside the MediaWiki software.
+ A much more obscure use means, in medical discussion, a detached part of an organ, as of the pancreas, thyroid, or other gland.
+ During the nineteenth and most of the twentieth century, scientists thought that “Suchosaurus” was probably some kind of obscure Crocodilian.
+ In US history, the War of 1812 is the most obscure conflict.
+ The novel forms are “aitch”, a regular development of Medieval Latin “acca”; “jay”, a new letter presumably vocalized like neighboring “kay” to avoid confusion with established “gee” ; “wye”, of obscure origin but with an antecedent in Old French “wi”; “zee”, an American leveling of “zed” by analogy with the majority; and “izzard”, from the Romance phrase “i zed” or “i zeto” “and Z” said when reciting the alphabet.
+ It was an obscure genus until the discovery in the 1990s of nests, eggs, and hatchlings belonging to one of the species.
