single word requests - What is it called, when a situation is described in a complicated way instead of a simple one?



How do you say in English, when one describes the matter in a more complicated manner than it is?


For instance, one has two options, A and B; and either of them has to be accepted. One wants to say the same matter in either of the following two ways:





  1. Incorrectly failing to reject A.




  2. Incorrectly accepting A.





Both 1) and 2) are equivalent statements, but in 1) the person is speaking in a complicated way.


In other words, what a situation/way is called when it is being described in a complicated manner, instead of simple one.


I hope, you understand what I want to ask.



Answer



The first sentence is verbose and uses a convoluted language.



verbose:
Using or expressed in more words than are needed: much academic language is obscure and verbose ODO


convoluted:
(Especially of an argument, story, or sentence) extremely complex and difficult to follow: the film is let down by a convoluted plot in which nothing really happens
ODO



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