0 the disappearance of the whole or part of the sun when the moon comes between it and the earth, or of the moon when the earth’s shadow falls across it -- eklipse; solformørkelse
1 to obscure or cut off the light or sight of (the sun or moon) -- formørke
2 to be much better than -- overskygge; stjæle billedet fra
The current focus on dementia risks eclipsing other mental health problems of later life.
By the end of the 1990s, calls to restructure the welfare state eclipsed apologies on the part of its defenders.
In the second, it seems to confirm the model for eclipses, despite an apparent di$culty.
Muddling through this century, however, we find that the 'conservation ethic' has often been eclipsed by a predilection for fancy 'conservation tools'.
On this day, the moon got eaten [eclipsed].
Calendar specialists must have been aware that eclipses kept recurring in the same parts of the divinatory calendar, about 520 days apart.
One factor which may determine ' 'dominance' ' or cause a parallel grammar to be eclipsed, is the recognition of recursion.
We found, for example, that eclipses recorded for the years 1504, 1508, and 1510 would not have been par ticularly impressive events in this region.
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太陽, 日蝕, 月蝕…
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太阳, 日食, 月食…
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eclipse, eclipse [masculine]…
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月食…
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güneş/ay tutulması, değerini düşürmek, önemsizleştirmek…
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éclipse [feminine], éclipse, éclipser…
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