vague
vayg
- s not clearly understood or expressed
their descriptions of human behavior become vague, dull, and unclear"- P.A.Sorokin
vague...forms of speech...have so long passed for mysteries of science"- John Locke - a not precisely limited, determined, or distinguished
vague feelings of sadness
a vague uneasiness - s lacking clarity or distinctness
saw a vague outline of a building through the fog
- We're running out of time to be vague on climate change.
- To the world he was the rock star Freddie Mercury, lead singer of Queen, with features and an accent that were ethnically vague but probably British, if one had to guess.
- President Obama's brief speech about the future of financial regulation this afternoon was pretty vague.