释义 |
Definition of erasure in English: erasurenoun ɪˈreɪʒəəˈreɪʃər mass noun1The removal of writing, recorded material, or data. Example sentencesExamples - In the years since 1981, I have seen both significant erasures and wholesale additions.
- With painstaking penmanship and a few erasures to correct spellings and numbers, the little girl explained herself.
- It will only be these rough notes which will be liable to erasure.
- Likewise the second round of erasures eliminates all points with a 1 in the second position after the radix point.
- We need no asterisks or erasures.
- The judges recorded their diving scores on cardboard "with a lot of erasure," she said.
- It is true that if someone needs to investigate the erasure, the tonal image will need to be examined.
- His paintings are full of erasures, redrawn lines and strokes partially covered with translucent white paint.
- Avoid blots and erasures; they indicate carelessness or unbecoming haste.
- Paintings were written upon, over-painted, and amended with the erasures remaining visible.
- The shots handed to VCE included some complicated digital erasure shots, motion control shots, and digital compositing duties.
- Some of these supraliminal frames are panels of video static, a screen equivalent of total erasure.
- Regardless of who is at fault, it is clear that never before in jazz has a movie caused the actual erasure of important music.
- DVD-R is a write-once format, meaning that data can be written to a disc and stored without fear of accidental erasure.
- His penmanship was very neat, and his letters and manuscripts, as completed by him, are without blots or erasures.
- Erasure will clearly also have a serious effect on a doctor's employment and right to practise.
- The multiple erasures of the historical record, as successive occupations and regimes rewrote truth, have left interesting legacies in Poland.
- I point out that any mistakes or erasures won't show, as the figure will be turned over and clean side will face up.
- Byron became enthusiastic about the project, and wrote out a 16-line poem "Saul," in less than an hour with no erasures.
- The crucial detail is the erasure of the serial numbers.
Synonyms deletion, rubbing out, wiping out/off crossing out, striking out, scoring out, blotting out, blanking out, scratching out, cancelling, cancellation effacement, expunction, expunging, excision, removal, obliteration, elimination censorship, censoring, bowdlerization rare erasement - 1.1 The removal of all traces of something; obliteration.
the erasure of prior history Example sentencesExamples - It follows that in the present case the first and main question is whether the direction of erasure was justified.
- Postmodern psychology argues for the erasure of the category of self.
- The duration of time they will be retained before erasure or destruction should be specified.
- Faith in American virtue remains intact, and the erasure of collective memory is stunning.
- Of course, the ascription is tenuous, and wars are fought over the erasure of place, as though to suggest it was malleable.
- "Before" and "after" satellite photographs showed the erasure even of geographic features of the landscape.
- The process of historical erasure may have started then.
- It's a symphonic dance, like Ravel's La Valse, a study in the erasure of the bar line while keeping a steady pulse.
- Regardless of popular calls for the erasure of African identity, I steadfastly remain of African descent.
- For Améry, forced explusion from his country and his language was not a loss but an erasure.
- Their departure was not an erasure of an era because memories remained.
- This political-ideological position is deeply contradictory, and necessarily involves erasures.
- How salutary is modernity if it is accompanied by the erasure of cultural traditions?
- On the one hand, Pope's symbolic erasure of "Madam Dacier" anticipates her misconstrued legacy.
- This willful erasure seems to represent the deliberate amnesia of a society that does not want to remember.
- It is a question not of temporal displacement but rather the erasure of narrative time itself.
- Others found comfort in the erasure of the recent past.
- Erasure, like silence, suggests a sweeping lack of authority by owning up to a loss of control.
- The erasure of historical language points to the crisis of public memory as a tool for agency and civic engagement.
Definition of erasure in US English: erasurenounəˈreɪʃərəˈrāSHər 1The removal of writing, recorded material, or data. Example sentencesExamples - The multiple erasures of the historical record, as successive occupations and regimes rewrote truth, have left interesting legacies in Poland.
- Regardless of who is at fault, it is clear that never before in jazz has a movie caused the actual erasure of important music.
- The crucial detail is the erasure of the serial numbers.
- It will only be these rough notes which will be liable to erasure.
- I point out that any mistakes or erasures won't show, as the figure will be turned over and clean side will face up.
- DVD-R is a write-once format, meaning that data can be written to a disc and stored without fear of accidental erasure.
- The shots handed to VCE included some complicated digital erasure shots, motion control shots, and digital compositing duties.
- Erasure will clearly also have a serious effect on a doctor's employment and right to practise.
- With painstaking penmanship and a few erasures to correct spellings and numbers, the little girl explained herself.
- His paintings are full of erasures, redrawn lines and strokes partially covered with translucent white paint.
- Likewise the second round of erasures eliminates all points with a 1 in the second position after the radix point.
- Byron became enthusiastic about the project, and wrote out a 16-line poem "Saul," in less than an hour with no erasures.
- The judges recorded their diving scores on cardboard "with a lot of erasure," she said.
- Avoid blots and erasures; they indicate carelessness or unbecoming haste.
- It is true that if someone needs to investigate the erasure, the tonal image will need to be examined.
- Some of these supraliminal frames are panels of video static, a screen equivalent of total erasure.
- We need no asterisks or erasures.
- Paintings were written upon, over-painted, and amended with the erasures remaining visible.
- In the years since 1981, I have seen both significant erasures and wholesale additions.
- His penmanship was very neat, and his letters and manuscripts, as completed by him, are without blots or erasures.
Synonyms deletion, rubbing out, wiping off, wiping out - 1.1 The removal of all traces of something; obliteration.
the erasure of prior history Example sentencesExamples - Regardless of popular calls for the erasure of African identity, I steadfastly remain of African descent.
- Postmodern psychology argues for the erasure of the category of self.
- On the one hand, Pope's symbolic erasure of "Madam Dacier" anticipates her misconstrued legacy.
- Erasure, like silence, suggests a sweeping lack of authority by owning up to a loss of control.
- It's a symphonic dance, like Ravel's La Valse, a study in the erasure of the bar line while keeping a steady pulse.
- This willful erasure seems to represent the deliberate amnesia of a society that does not want to remember.
- It is a question not of temporal displacement but rather the erasure of narrative time itself.
- Of course, the ascription is tenuous, and wars are fought over the erasure of place, as though to suggest it was malleable.
- The duration of time they will be retained before erasure or destruction should be specified.
- The erasure of historical language points to the crisis of public memory as a tool for agency and civic engagement.
- Others found comfort in the erasure of the recent past.
- This political-ideological position is deeply contradictory, and necessarily involves erasures.
- It follows that in the present case the first and main question is whether the direction of erasure was justified.
- For Améry, forced explusion from his country and his language was not a loss but an erasure.
- Their departure was not an erasure of an era because memories remained.
- How salutary is modernity if it is accompanied by the erasure of cultural traditions?
- "Before" and "after" satellite photographs showed the erasure even of geographic features of the landscape.
- The process of historical erasure may have started then.
- Faith in American virtue remains intact, and the erasure of collective memory is stunning.
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