ecliptic, a. and n.
(ɪˈklɪptɪk)
Forms: 4–8 ecliptick(e, -tik(e, -que, (4, 7 ecc-, eclyptic(k, 7 æcliptique, 8 eccliptic), 7– ecliptic.
[ad. (directly or through F. écliptique) L. eclīptic-us, Gr. ἐκλειπτικός in same sense.]
A. adj. Of or pertaining to an eclipse. ecliptic limits: the limits within which an eclipse is possible. ecliptic conjunction: a conjunction of sun and moon which results in a solar eclipse.
| 1609 Holland Amm. Marcell. xx. iii. 145 When [the Sunne] himselfe and the roundle of the Moone..are come to those dimensions which they usually tearme..eclipticke or defective [defectivas] conjunctions ascending and descending. 1755 B. Martin Mag. Arts & Sci. ii. vi. 153 These ecliptic Nights last but a little Time. 1771 Maskelyne in Phil. Trans. LXI. 544 The time of the ecliptic conjunction may be deduced. 1834 Nat. Philos. III. Astron. 93/2 (Usef. Knowl. Ser.) The solar ecliptic limits exceed the lunar. |
| fig. 1678 Sir T. Herbert Mem. Chas. I, 88 (T.) In this ecliptick condition was the king..sequestered in a manner from the comfort earth and air affords. |
† b. ecliptic circle,
ecliptic line,
ecliptic way:
= ecliptic n.| c 1391 Chaucer Astrol. Prol. 3 To knowe in owre orizonte..the arising of any planete aftur his latitude fro the Ecliptik lyne. 1594 Blundevil Exerc. iii. i. xiv. (ed. 7) 305 You must have respect only to the Ecliptique line. 1662 Hobbes Seven Prob. Wks. 1845 VII. 10 Does not the earth move..in the ecliptic circle once a year? 1712 Blackmore Creation ii. (1736) 52 The sun revolving thro' th' ecclyptic way. |
| fig. 1649 Selden Laws Eng. ii. xxx. (1739) 137 He would therefore have his way like that of the Zodiack, broad enough for Planetary motion of any one that could not contain himself within the Ecliptick Line of the Law. |
¶ Used by mistake for
elliptic.
| 1634–46 Row Hist. Kirk (1842) 53 The Exercise of Prophesieing, or, in ecliptick expression, the Exercise of the Ministers. |
B. n. 1. The great circle of the celestial sphere which is the apparent orbit of the sun. So called because eclipses can happen only when the moon is on or very near this line. Sometimes put for the plane of the ecliptic.
| 1635 N. Carpenter Geog. Del. i. ix. 208 The distance of the Pole circles from the Pole is iust so much as the declination of the Eclipticke from the Equatour. 1646 Sir T. Browne Pseud. Ep. 291 If we imagine the Sun to make his course out of the Eclyptick, and upon a line without any obliquity. 1698 J. Keill Exam. The. Earth (1734) 225 It [is]..impossible to conceive how a Sphere can be inclin'd to a Plane, passing thro' its Center as the Ecliptick does thro' the Center of the Earth. 1774 Goldsmith Nat. Hist. (1862) I. iv. 13 Its equator was in the plane of the ecliptic. 1854 Kelly & Tomlinson tr. Arago's Astron. 121 The inclination of the orbit of this comet to the ecliptic is 12° 34{p}. |
2. The great circle on the terrestrial sphere which at any given moment lies in the plane of the celestial ecliptic.
| 1819 Pantologia, Ecliptic, in geography, an imaginary great circle on the terrestrial globe..falling upon the plane of the celestial ecliptic. |