Free Online Dictionary
occultation
| Babylon English English dictionary | Download this dictionary |
occultation
n.
obscuration, act of hiding from view; eclipse, obscuration of one celestial body by another closer celestial body (Astronomy); hiddenness, concealment; act of disappearing from view
| Wikipedia English The Free Encyclopedia | Download this dictionary |
Occultation
An occultation is an event that occurs when one object is hidden by another object that passes between it and the observer. The word is used in astronomy (see below). It can also refer to any situation wherein an object in the foreground blocks from view (occults) an object in the background. In this general sense, occultation applies to the visual scene observed from low-flying aircraft (or computer-generated imagery) wherein foreground objects obscure distant dynamically, as the scene changes over time.
| See more at Wikipedia.org... |
© This article uses material from Wikipedia® and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License and under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
| WordNet 2.0 Dictionary | Download this dictionary |
occultation
Noun
1. one celestial body obscures another
(synonym) eclipse
(hypernym) interruption, break
(hyponym) solar eclipse
(part-meronym) egress, emersion
| Babylon French English dictionary | Download this dictionary |
occultation
nf.
occultation, obscuration; concealing, hiding
| Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) | Download this dictionary |
Occultation
(n.)
The hiding of a heavenly body from sight by the intervention of some other of the heavenly bodies; -- applied especially to eclipses of stars and planets by the moon, and to the eclipses of satellites of planets by their primaries.
The hiding of a heavenly body from sight by the intervention of some other of the heavenly bodies; -- applied especially to eclipses of stars and planets by the moon, and to the eclipses of satellites of planets by their primaries.
(n.)
Fig.: The state of being occult.
Fig.: The state of being occult.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter. About
| occultation in French | occultation in Italian | occultation in Spanish | occultation in Dutch | occultation in Portuguese | occultation in German | occultation in Russian | occultation in Japanese | occultation in Greek | occultation in Turkish | occultation in Hebrew | occultation in Arabic | occultation in Thai | occultation in Polish | occultation in Latvian | occultation in Croatian | occultation in Urdu | occultation in Bulgarian | occultation in Danish | occultation in Finnish | occultation in Norwegian | occultation in Romanian | occultation in Farsi | occultation in Indonesian | occultation in Vietnamese
You think you have ethics...
Take the survey NOW!
