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[ US /ˌɛsəˈtɛɹɪk, ˌɛsoʊˈtɛɹɪk/ ]
[ UK /ˌɛsə‍ʊtˈɛɹɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. confined to and understandable by only an enlightened inner circle
    a compilation of esoteric philosophical theories

How To Use esoteric In A Sentence

  • He is fond of pointing out how esoteric this debate is to the wider public.
  • Lawyers and judges also spent time this year on more esoteric subjects. Times, Sunday Times
  • The trivia enthusiast in me thrilled to discover oodles of esoteric tidbits on every page - and not just about salt.
  • Whether or not you're a logomaniac (one obsessed with words), this esoteric collection of English words should prove entertaining; it even might make you cachinnate (laugh loudly) as you turn the pages.
  • He pointed out that the book review is a news service, a digest of the latest news about books - not publicity for publishers, nor a rarified forum for highbrow esoterica.
  • Hallucigenia" hits a good cross section of themes and set pieces central to my work -- hard bitten protagonists, dark cults, insanity, gratuitous rumpy pumpy, esoteric lore, super science, monsters, and cosmic horror all tangled up in pulp-noir webbing. INTERVIEW: Laird Barron
  • Kashmir's contribution to the Indian thought has been of immense artistic, esoteric and aesthetic value.
  • Hence that wide-spread Pythagorean philosophy, with its spheral harmonics and esoteric mysteries, uniting in one brotherhood for many years men of thought and action, -- dare we say, our inferiors? The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 20, June, 1859
  • Ironically, a nation of know-nothings is secretly guided by adherents of an esoteric political tradition rooted in a grand conversation among philosophers ranging from ancient Greece to Weimar Germany.
  • n. - doctrine denying existence of universe distinct from God. acosmist, acroamatic adj. - esoteric, told only orally. acrocephalic Xml's Blinklist.com
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