0 a situation in which the sun is covered by the moon, or the moon is covered by the Earth's shadow (= dark area) -- zaćmienie
1 to make another person or thing seem much less important, good, or famous -- przyćmiewać, spychać na dalszy plan
[ often passive ] Braque was somewhat eclipsed by Picasso.
2 to make an eclipse of the moon or sun -- przesłaniać
There are grounds for criticism here because the present may be eclipsing an attention to the past.
The schedule of these observed later events may have served as the resource material that set the pattern for retrodicting eclipses.
Rather, it highlights those cases in which older urban models were eclipsed by new ones.
Whatever the reason, research into music of the eighteenth century was eclipsed in terms of the number of publications, conferences and doctoral dissertations.
One potential problem - possible confusion from background stars, particularly eclipsing binaries near the line of sight to a foreground target star - is addressed here.
With electronic technology, the performer has been eclipsed, and inauthentic interpretations, even less so arrangements, are unwelcome and unnecessary.
In (16) the verb of the relative is eclipsed and there is a resumptive pronoun.
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.