obliterate

suomi-englanti sanakirja

obliterate englannista suomeksi

  1. hävittää

  2. pyyhkiä pois

  3. tuhota

  4. tuhottu, hävitetty

  5. peittää

  1. Verbi

  2. hävittää, tuhota

  3. täyttää

  4. täyttyä

obliterate englanniksi

  1. To destroy (someone or something) completely, leaving no trace; to annihilate, to out.

  2. (synonyms)

  3. (RQ:Bacon Learning)&93; deſigned to obliterate and extinguiſh the memorie of Heathen antiquitie and Authors.

  4. (RQ:Baxter Catholick Theologie) It obliterateth the notion of Gods Holineſs, vvhich to be no Holineſs, but a common or indifferent thing.

  5. (RQ:Grew Cosmologia Sacra)

  6. (RQ:Macaulay History of England)'s&93; mind.

  7. (RQ:Whitman Specimen Days) A new race, a young and lusty generation, already sweeps in with oceanic currents, obliterating the war, and all its scars, its mounded graves, and all its reminiscences of hatred, conflict, death. So let it be obliterated.

  8. (RQ:Black Madcap Violet)

  9. (quote-book) and the Egyptian Resurrection(nb...)|location=London|publisher=Philip Lee Warner; New York, N.Y.: G. P. Putnam's Sons|George Palmer Putnam’s Sons|year=1911|page=363|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/osirisegyptianre02budg/page/363/mode/1up|oclc=1686705|passage=The seal of Pepi is in the House of Rurutȧ. The god who obliterateth sin, Ȧṭer-ȧsfet, obliterateth the transgressions which belong to Pepi in the presence of Khenti-merti in Sekhem.

  10. (quote-journal)

  11. To hide (something) by covering it; to conceal, to obscure.

  12. (ux)

  13. (RQ:Topsell Foure-footed Beastes)

  14. (quote-book) J. Cooke; and Robinson (bookseller)|G. G. J. and J. Robinson, Cadell (publisher)|Thomas Cadell, and (publishers)|Francis and Charles Rivington,(nb...)|month=(date written)|year=a. 1793|year_published=1793|volume=II|page=33|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=RkIRAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA33|oclc=1205091892|passage=When the ſhadows of the evening are ſtretched out, (..) when the veil, that is caſt over the face of nature, obliterateth the variety of colours which owe their being to the light, and aboliſheth all the diſtinction of objects thence ariſing, introducing a joyleſs and uncomfortable uniformity, and rendering it impoſſible for any to "go forth to their labour;" (..) then it is that deep ſleep falleth upon man.

  15. To make (a drawing, text which is printed or written, etc.) indecipherable, either by erasing or obscuring it; to out, to efface, to delete.

  16. (hyponyms)

  17. (RQ:Speed Historie of Great Britaine)

  18. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Robert Young for Nicolas Bourne,(nb...)|year=1636|page=773|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=RSWUl6AKxs4C&pg=PA773|oclc=1356168089|passage=As one foule blot or daſh vvith a pen defaceth a vvhole vvriting, ſo one foule and enormous crime ''daſheth'' and ''obliterateth'' the ''faireſt copy'' of a vertuous life.

  19. (RQ:More Psychodia)

  20. (RQ:Hale Contemplations)

  21. (quote-book)|edition=2nd|location=London|publisher=(...) T. and C. Buck,(nb...) for S. Holdworth,(nb...)|year=1836|page=58|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/ceremoniescustom00isaa/page/58/mode/1up|oclc=18734594|passage=Blessed art thou, O Lord, universal King! who pardonest and forgivest our sins, and the sins of thy people Israel, and obliteratest our guilt year after year; (..)

  22. (RQ:Bulwer-Lytton Last of the Barons)

  23. (RQ:Hardy Tess)

  24. (RQ:Chambers Younger Set)

  25. To impair the function and/or structure of (a body cavity, vessel, etc.) by ablating or occluding it (in the latter case, chiefly by filling it with tissue).

  26. To cancel (a stamp) with a postmark so it cannot be reused.

  27. To be destroyed completely, leaving no trace.

  28. Of a body cavity, vessel, etc.: to close up or fill with tissue; of perfusion or a pulse: to cease owing to obstruction.

  29. Completely destroyed or erased; effaced, obliterated.

  30. (RQ:Donne Works) and thou shalt find in that office as many records of attainted families, and escheated families, and impoverished and forgotten, and obliterate families, as of families newly erected and presently celebrated.

  31. (RQ:Ward Simple Cobler)

  32. (RQ:More Immortality of the Soul)

  33. Of markings on an insect: difficult to distinguish from the background; faint, indistinct.

  34. (inflection of)

  35. (feminine plural of)

  36. (es-verb form of)