The meaning of obnubilate becomes clearer when you know that its ancestors are the Latin terms ob- (meaning "in the way") and nubes ("cloud"). It's a high-flown sounding word, which may be why it often turns up in texts by and about politicians. This has been true for a long time. In fact, when the U.S. Constitution was up for ratification, 18th-century Pennsylvania statesman James Wilson used obnubilate to calm fears that the president would have too much power: "Our first executive magistrate is not obnubilated behind the mysterious obscurity of counsellors…. He is the dignified, but accountable magistrate of a free and great people."
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Latin obnūbilātus, past participle of obnūbilāre "to make dark or obscure, becloud, darken (the mind)," from ob- "toward, facing" + nūbilāre "to become cloudy or overcast," derivative of nūbilus "cloudy, overcast, dark, dim, confused," from nūbēs "cloud" + -ilus, denominative adjective suffix — more at ob-, nuance
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