eclipse
noun /ɪˈklɪps/
/ɪˈklɪps/
- [countable] an occasion when the moon passes between the earth and the sun so that you cannot see all or part of the sun for a time; an occasion when the earth passes between the moon and the sun so that you cannot see all or part of the moon for a time
- an eclipse of the sun/moon
- a total/partial eclipse
WordfinderTopics Spacec1- daylight
- eclipse
- equinox
- ray
- rise
- solar
- solstice
- the sun
- twilight
- the universe
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- lunar
- solar
- partial
- …
- an eclipse of the moon
- an eclipse of the sun
- [singular, uncountable] a loss of importance, power, etc. especially because somebody/something else has become more important, powerful, etc.
- The election result marked the eclipse of the right wing.
- in eclipse Her work was in eclipse for most of the 20th century.
Word OriginMiddle English: from Old French e(s)clipse (noun), eclipser (verb), via Latin from Greek ekleipsis, from ekleipein ‘fail to appear, be eclipsed’, from ek ‘out’ + leipein ‘to leave’.