Nuri Ismail links to the Wikipedia article[
^], which I think describes it fairly well. But if an analogy would help, think of going to a convenience store...
You walk into a convenience store, select the item you wish to buy, hand money to the clerk behind the counter, and walk out. Many other people perform this same action each day, and never have any other connection to the shop. The clerk may be replaced numerous times as well, without any significant change in how customers make their purchases. So long as both the clerk and the customer understand the relevant interfaces, they can interact effectively and efficiently without knowing anything else about one another.
Contrast this with the relationship between you and your employer: you may still interact through a large number of general-purpose interfaces, but it's usually more effective if you both know something about one another beyond what's explicitly stated in your contract.