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erasure"an erasing, an obliterating," 1734, from erase + -ure.
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erasureEnglish pop duo, popular back in the late 80's and early ninties. Wrote great songs, with Vince Clark's innovative use of synthesised sounds and samples creating a varied and exciting [..]
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erasure[A] process intended to render magnetically stored information irretrievable by normal means. [INFOSEC-99]
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erasureNames or words written, stamped, or printed in a book and subsequently removed, usually with a gum eraser if in pencil or by some other abrasive means if in ink. Erasures almost always decrease the va [..]
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erasureto highlight suspect ideologies, notions linked to the metaphysics of presence, Derrida put them under "erasure," metaphorically pointing out the absence of any definitive meaning. B [..]
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erasureErasure is a method of alteration of an instrument. It is a correction made by erasing. It means rubbing, scraping, or wiping out. Sometimes the term erasure refers to an effective revocation of a wil [..]
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erasure(n) a correction made by erasing(n) a surface area where something has been erased(n) deletion by an act of expunging or erasing
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erasureAn instance when written text or music notation has been removed from the parchment via scraping or other method of removal.
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erasureis the act of erasing all traces of something.
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