A total eclipse is one in which the celestial body is completely obscured by the shadow or body of another. The key word is completely. A total solar eclipse has the moon completely blocking the sun with respect to some point on earth. A total lunar eclipse has the moon completely inside the umbra of the earth's shadow.

With solar eclipses, a distinction should be drawn between the annular eclipse and the total eclipse. In an annular eclipse, there is a thin ring round the disk of the moon that is not covered. This is because the moon does not have a perfectly circular orbit around the earth, nor does the earth have a perfectly circular orbit around the sun. When there is an eclipse and the moon is further away it takes up a smaller arc of the sky. Likewise, when the earth is closer to the sun, the sun will take up a larger arc of the sky. If the sun's arc is larger than the moon's arc, it will be an annular eclipse.