eclipsed / ɪˈklɪps /

黯然失色黯然失色的黯淡无光黯然销魂

eclipsed2 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. Astronomy. the obscuration of the light of the moon by the intervention of the earth between it and the sun or the obscuration of the light of the sun by the intervention of the moon between it and a point on the earth .a similar phenomenon with respect to any other planet and either its satellite or the sun.the partial or complete interception of the light of one component of a binary star by the other.
  2. any obscuration of light.
  3. a reduction or loss of splendor, status, reputation, etc.: Scandal caused the eclipse of his career.
v. 有主动词 verb

e·clipsed, e·clips·ing.

  1. to cause to undergo eclipse: The moon eclipsed the sun.
  2. to make less outstanding or important by comparison; surpass: a soprano whose singing eclipsed that of her rivals.

eclipsed 近义词

v. 动词 verb

obscure, veil

v. 动词 verb

surpass achievement

更多eclipsed例句

  1. On April 8, 2024, a total eclipse will cross North America from Mexico to Newfoundland.
  2. “They will be flying through the structure we will see from Earth during the solar eclipse,” Raouafi says.
  3. Much of Europe and the northeastern United States will see a partial solar eclipse.
  4. Immediately around that tiny partial eclipse, the same starlight that was being blocked by an exoplanet would pass through its atmosphere.
  5. At that same conference in D.C. where she met Saa, Gurira performed an excerpt from Eclipsed.
  6. The glamour of the seaside resort has long since been eclipsed by spectacular violence.
  7. Indeed, when you read it, you comprehend how, almost inevitably, his oratorical gifts eclipsed his skill as a writer.
  8. The first is the shared history of the Americas, too often eclipsed by the story of U.S. “exceptionalism.”
  9. His flaws are eclipsed by the sizable shadow of his strengths.
  10. From the moment that he touches the magical little hand, cousin George is eclipsed.
  11. But she cared not—she saw a gathering school and rising church, which eclipsed all thought of present inattentions and gaucheries.
  12. Notwithstanding its wealth, the house of the Medici was eclipsed on this occasion by the court of France.
  13. Although eclipsed in show by some present, theirs was a new constellation, and they must support observation as they could.
  14. But in the hour of his misfortune, a phenomenon not infrequent—the idea of God had become eclipsed in his mind.