Obfuscate is when you purposely obscure, hinder or make something hard to understand. It is also when you attempt to bewilder.
"Obfuscate" means to deliberately make something unclear or difficult to understand by using confusion or complexity in language or behavior.
Here is an example:Please do not obfuscate the truth.
He attempted to obfuscate the truth by providing vague and misleading information during the investigation.
Your economy of expression works to obfuscate your meaning, but I think you may be referring to a 'parallel' line.
muddy, obfuscate
Obfuscate.
It's not Smoking Mirrors, it's Smoke and Mirrors and alludes to the Magicians use of Smoke and Mirrors to obfuscate the trick they perpetrate.
The likely word sought is the adjective "obsequious" (fawning, flattering).The related form is the plural noun obsequies, meaning funeral rites.
There is a fine line between abstraction and obfuscation.
To confuse or bewilder. To make obscure or unclear.
A 'sentence' can mean two things: 1. A discrete collection of words or utterances relating to the same subject. 2. A legal punishment. Since I know of no standard legal sentence containing the word 'obfuscate', I assume your question relates to the former definition. Therefore, the answer would be: 'A discrete collection of words relating to the word 'obfuscate'.' Hope that helps.
Complicate, Overcomplicate; Complexify; obfuscate.