0 to get rid of something completely or destroy something bad: --
The disease that once claimed millions of lives has now been eradicated.
The government claims to be doing all it can to eradicate corruption.
1 to get rid of or destroy something completely: --
Yet we need to remind ourselves that ageism cannot be eradicated by non-ageist language alone.
Even if we could eradicate discrimination, we may not have ideal levels of assistance for those with impairments.
Rather than eradicating the comparatively few survivors of myxomatosis, a rabbit population was allowed to reestablish itself.
Information at the herd-level may be sufficient when one aims to eradicate disease from the herd.
This chapter will not provide students with much useful information regarding the principles of epidemiology or the paradigms for controlling and eradicating parasitic diseases.
In the former, labour-market liberalization is reinforced by political repression to eradicate labour collectivism.
The conclusion includes a prospective view and has remarks on inter-marriage and the pressing need to eradicate poverty and ageist discrimination through government legislation.
Theoretically, short-term tocolytic treatment could reduce uterine contractions while initiating factors are being eradicated.