Crossword clues for esoterica
esoterica
- Trio cease perversely making things obscure
- It's hard to figure out
- Abstruse knowledge
- Trivia night subjects
- Things few understand
- They're not known by many
- Specialized material
- Really specialized knowledge
- Niche-interest info
- Mysterious items — ciao trees (anag)
- It's meant for a select few
- In-group's secrets
- Hard-to-understand facts
- Abstruse information
- Brain clutter
- Crossword topics, often
- Dark matter?
- It's hard to understand
- Specialized knowledge
- Secrets known only to an initiated minority
- Recondite matters
- Abstruse facts or things
- Arrangement of Eroica set to offer strange stuff
- Mysterious things
- Assorted secret items and objects, primarily?
- Highly specialised subjects
- Highly specialised publications in German removed from various categories
- Heather collects a couple of notes for obscure topics
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
by 1807, from Latinized Greek esoterikos "belonging to an inner circle, pertaining to those within" (see esoteric).
Wiktionary
n. Things that are esoteric; things that are impractical or specialised.
WordNet
n. secrets known only to an initiated minority
Wikipedia
Esoterica is an over-the-counter topical ointment applied to the skin for the purpose of lightening freckles, age spots, chloasma, melasma, and other skin discolorations due to a benign localized increase in the production of melanin. Esoterica may have other appropriate medical uses as determined by a physician.
Usage examples of "esoterica".
The hall is deserted of course, it is always deserted, very few people in the sector we occupy have any interest whatsoever in the past and specialists have their separate facilities in the museum, little carels in which they exhibit the minutae and miniaturizations of the Golden Era, seeking esoterica which such as we can never understand.
He himself had no firsthand knowledge of such esoterica, but thought that anyone who laid eyes on Kesk would have no difficulty crediting the story.
Every word he'd said had been in Sponglish, but it might as well have been an Azanian witch doctor explaining the esoterica of his craft.