solar eclipse
solar eclipse — 名詞
1. an astronomical event that takes place when the Moon passes directly between the
日食
月球擋住太陽光的天文現象
an astronomical event that takes place when the Moon passes directly between the Earth and the Sun, briefly blocking sunlight from reaching parts of the Earth's surface.
The elementary school planned a special science lesson for the solar eclipse.
那間小學為日食準備了一堂特別的自然課。
collocation: planned for the solar eclipse
The astronomer warned everyone never to look at a solar eclipse without special glasses.
天文學家警告大家,絕不能沒有專用眼鏡就直接觀看日食。
caution: requires eye protection to view safely
During the total solar eclipse, the sky turned completely dark and the birds stopped singing.
日全食期間,天空完全變暗,鳥兒也停止了鳴叫。
Scientists traveled to Chile to observe the solar eclipse and study the sun's outer atmosphere.
科學家飛到智利觀測日食,研究太陽的外層大氣。
The science museum sold special eclipse glasses a week before the solar eclipse.
科學博物館在日食前一週就開始販售專用 eclipse 眼鏡。
- eclipse of the sun
more formal or technical phrasing; less common in everyday speech
- lunar eclipse
the opposite event — the Earth blocks sunlight from reaching the Moon
文法句型
a/the solar eclipse
solar eclipse + verb
用法筆記
Never look directly at a solar eclipse without certified eclipse glasses — doing so can cause permanent eye damage. The four main types are total, partial, annular, and hybrid. In Taiwan, solar eclipses are frequently covered in news and school science programmes.