benighted

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * 1)  Overtaken by night; especially of a traveller, etc.: caught out by oncoming night before reaching one's destination.
 * 2) * 1890,, Christmas in England, Methodist Magazine, Volume 32, pg481
 * I recollect well losing the goodwill of my old grandmother by allowing a benighted wagoner to light his lantern while her back was turned,
 * 1)  Plunged into darkness.
 * 2)  Lacking education or knowledge; unenlightened; also, lacking morality; immoral, unscrupulous.
 * 3)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * I recollect well losing the goodwill of my old grandmother by allowing a benighted wagoner to light his lantern while her back was turned,
 * 1)  Plunged into darkness.
 * 2)  Lacking education or knowledge; unenlightened; also, lacking morality; immoral, unscrupulous.
 * 3)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * 1)  Lacking education or knowledge; unenlightened; also, lacking morality; immoral, unscrupulous.
 * 2)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * 1)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * 1)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * 1)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * 1)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * 1)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * 1)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * 1)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * 1)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * 1)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.
 * 1)  Difficult to understand; abstruse, obscure.

Usage notes

 * Not to be confused with.

Translations

 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:, , ,  ,
 * Serbo-Croatian: neprosvijećen, neprosvećen
 * Ukrainian:, неосві́чений


 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Ukrainian:


 * Old English: þīestre
 * Old English: nokte kaptita