0 past simple and past participle of eradicate --
1 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.
Medievalists regard the situation in their period as straightforward colonialism which was eradicated by the 'union' of 1536.
It is an approach for inconsistency management in which con-ict is explored rather than eradicated.
It says that, once the disease is eradicated, there will be no more infections - and, therefore, no further need to vaccinate.
The mal went underground, and the insults to public order stopped, but it was not fully eradicated until 1873.
In this study quantitative estimates are made of the rate at which tsetse re-invade areas from which they have been suppressed but not necessarily eradicated.
However, nineteenth-century physicians' fascination with "the curious" was obscured more than eradicated.
Furthermore, even lethal mutants and mutants of large effect are only partially purged, not eradicated, from the population.
Tumors over 1.5 cm were not reliably eradicated with cryoablation.