0 past simple and past participle of erase --
1 to remove something, especially a pencil mark by rubbing it: --
2 to remove recordings or information from a magnetic tape or disk: --
3 to cause a feeling, memory, or period of time to be completely forgotten: --
Years of hard living had blurred but not erased her girlhood beauty.
The president said NATO expansion would finally erase the boundary line in Europe artificially created by the Cold War.
One election cannot erase 65 years of a corrupt one-party political process.
Woods wants a convincing victory to erase doubts about his team's ability to reach the World Cup finals.
He is determined to erase the memory of a disappointing debut two years ago.
Moreover, if there is an interaction, the argument is likely to be duplicated or erased.
During -reduction, some parts of a -term are duplicated or erased; those parts are translated into principal nets called coded translations.
The calcarine fissure has been opened and erased by the unfolding process.
In fact, one could truthfully state, of a whiteboard, that it 'erases easily', even if the whiteboard in question has never so far been erased.
From a policy perspective, the boundary between mental and physical disorders is erased by linking mental illnesses with biological processes.
Many of the other individual needs of residents seem to have been erased and substituted by the value attached to physical and social order.
Brackets and non-empty equation sets do not occur in user source-language programs, and brackets could be erased in a production implementation.
Event lists can be named, and when they are, they become persistent (until explicitly erased within a document or session).