eclipse
eclipse 英 [ɪˈklɪps] 美 [ɪˈklɪps]
vt. 使黯然失色;形成蚀 n. 日蚀,月蚀;黯然失色
进行时:eclipsing 过去式:eclipsed 过去分词:eclipsed 第三人称单数:eclipses 名词复数:eclipses
- Have you ever seen an eclipse? That's when the sun, earth or moon cross paths and cover each other up temporarily.
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- vt. 使黯然失色;形成蚀
- n. 日蚀,月蚀;黯然失色
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1. An eclipse is an interesting phenomenon.
日[月]蚀是一个有趣的现象。
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2. In a lunar eclipse, Earth passes between the sun and the moon.
在一次月蚀中,地球将从太阳和月球之间经过。
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3. And all is well, provided that the light returns and that the eclipse does not degenerate into night.
一切都很好,只要光明重现,只要暂时的隐没不要退化成黑夜就是了。
- eclipse (n.) c. 1300, from Old French eclipse "eclipse, darkness" (12c.), from Latin eclipsis, from Greek ekleipsis "an eclipse; an abandonment," literally "a failing, forsaking," from ekleipein "to forsake a usual place, fail to appear, be eclipsed," from ek "out" (see ex-) + leipein "to leave" (from PIE root *leikw- "to leave").
- eclipse (v.) late 13c., "to cause an eclipse of," from Old French eclipser, from eclipse (see eclipse (n.)).Figurative use from 1570s. Also in Middle English in an intransitive sense "to suffer an eclipse," now obsolete. Related: Eclipsed; eclipsing.
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