英:[ɪˈreɪʒə(r)]
美:[ɪˈreʃɚ]
英:[ɪˈreɪʒə(r)]
美:[ɪˈreʃɚ]
e·ra·sure
ih reI shr
词根:erase
adj.erasable 可消除的;可抹去的;可删除的
n.eraser 擦除器;[计] 清除器
vi.erase 被擦去,被抹掉
vt.erase 抹去;擦除
Noun
1. a correction made by erasing;
"there were many erasures in the typescript"
2. a surface area where something has been erased;
"another word had been written over the erasure"
3. deletion by an act of expunging or erasing
"擦除,抹去",1734年,来自 erase + -ure。 Rasure "刮擦或擦除的行为" 可追溯至公元1400年。
疑符
擦除
The first known use of erasure was in 1734
ergoadverb
therefore, hence
ergnoun
a centimeter-gram-second unit of work equal to the work done by a force of one dyne acting through a distance of one centimeter and equal to one ten-millionth joule
erepsinnoun
a mixture of peptidases from the intestinal juice
erectionnoun
the process of erecting : the state of being erected
the state marked by firm swollen form and erect position of a previously limp or flabby bodily part whose tissue becomes dilated with blood
an occurrence of such a state (as in the penis)
something erected
erect1 of 2adjective
straight up and down : upright erect poplars
an erect pole
straight in posture
sit erect
directed upward : raised
a tree with erect branches
being in a state of physiological erection
erect2 of 2verb
to put up or together by fitting together materials : build, assemble erect a playground slide
erect a building
to set upright
erect a flagpole
to construct (as a perpendicular) on a given base
erectileadjective
capable of becoming erect erectile feathers of a bird
erectile tissue
erect1 of 2adjective
straight up and down : upright erect poplars
an erect pole
straight in posture
sit erect
directed upward : raised
a tree with erect branches
being in a state of physiological erection
erect2 of 2verb
to put up or together by fitting together materials : build, assemble erect a playground slide
erect a building
to set upright
erect a flagpole
to construct (as a perpendicular) on a given base
ere1 of 2preposition
before entry 2 sense 3
ere2 of 2conjunction
before entry 3 sense 2
erbiumnoun
a soft rare metallic element see element
erasurenoun
an act or instance of erasing
1 We are sophisticated creatures so give emotional erasure a go – you don’t want to be churning over the same ground in decades to come.
2 Ms. Celmins’s sculptures have the same marks and, in the funny way art works, turn erasures into additions.
3 We're losing all this in this presumed fear of white erasure, which I think we need to change.
4 The presumptive, unspoken “white” in the first round of artists gentrification narrative is itself an erasure of these artists of color.
5 For example, in terms of the erasure of African authorship of food, consider Belgian chocolate.
6 We use infra-red light to pierce erasures in the correspondence.
7 Wholly marginalized in that story line, he argues, are the Palestinians, their own competing narrative diminished to the point of erasure.
8 Our stepfather adopted Ruth and me, resulting in the legal erasure of our last names.
9 The report highlights the erasure of thousands of community-sanctioned murders from both our landscape and our collective memory and notes that many lynchings, sometimes with thousands of witnesses, have been both ignored and buried.
10 It’s not quite 15 inches tall, but this jar points to the artistic achievements of enslaved African Americans and the persistent erasure of their work from America’s cultural institutions for nearly 300 years.
11 But what I’ve come to understand is that it is a detriment to us when we are participants in the erasure of the truth because of our discomfort with confronting it.
12 Hall agrees that they'd like to see storytelling "address the erasure of trans folks who experience pregnancy," but they also think it's "important that the media is nuanced and not sensationalized."
13 When one of these circuits is interrupted, with a cut in the paper or an erasure in a line, sparks fly.
14 The piece moves in a fairly herky-jerky manner until Ernestine Hayes enters and takes command as the elder Auntie Dolly, who recounts a harrowing story of cultural erasure with a happy epilogue.
15 Call it minority stress, or the closet, bi- erasure or bi-phobia; internalized or externalized, it was the source.
16 But that seems sad too, like an erasure of history.
17 If Scotland does become independent, it'll be partly due to the accumulation of such tiny erasures as this.
18 The inspection, modification, replacement or erasure of part of file's contents.
必须选择内容区域以创建或修改计划。
19 Ms. Bahrani, who is Iraqi, minces no words in describing what the erasure of art means to her.
20 Building an identity premised upon Black erasure leaves the world of country music fumbling when it should be reckoning.
1 消除
clear eliminate dissolve lull obviate disencumber cast aside work off resolution relief removal exorcism wipe dismiss erase undo dispel quell efface exorcise soothe away take away drive out smooth out stamp out smooth away drive out of break down elimination subside abate involute level free remove kill discuss shift smooth destroy resolve rid satisfy remedy dump cheat chill cushion scatter drown rubbish repel scotch dissipate obliterate liquidate raze allay muffle elide expiate depolarize decondition
4 消磁
5 删去部分