লোপ, বিলোপ
(1) Omission of a sound between two words (usually a vowel and the end of one word or the beginning of the next
(2) A deliberate act of omission
(3) Omission of a sound between two words (usually a vowel and the end of one word or the beginning of the next)
(1) Still others prefer a middle option that keeps the apostrophe for omission and elision but drops it for plurality and possession.
(2) However, this involves compaction and an elision ; the self processes memory selectively.
(3) The shortening of words by elision
(4) Again, with a little elision , this song speaks almost directly to voters.
(5) The SRBP also improved the performance of the target group when compared with the contrast group on phonological elision and nonword reading efficiency tasks.
(6) The obscurity of the pleading which is, if I may so with respect to the drafter of it, exceedingly clever, because the pleading is in terms always of a duty of care to do something and it is there the elision of two very separate ideas.
(7) This is such an obvious elision that one's instinct is to read the passage again and look for a misprint, or a set of scare quotes - but, no, it is written as intended.
(8) Similar to the Raskind and Higgins study, the present research also found significant increases in phonological awareness (i.e., phonological elision and nonword reading).
(9) Across Europe, among the sceptics and the doubters and the out-and-out protesters, a pernicious process of elision is taking place.
(10) Unease at the elision of so many vital questions
(11) As Liz Frost explores, there is an elision between the consumer power of youth in the Western world, and its ideation as physical perfection.
(12) The elision of two relatively stable and legitimate discourses of the idea of u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510capitalu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb and u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510emotional intelligenceu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb is a clever rhetorical move.
(13) Like Mann, Wood develops the theme of the u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510imperialism of tradeu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb, which is to say an elision of two apparently contradictory themes, direct domination, and free exchange.
(14) As either a broadcast or digital networked democracy, the individual and his/her body are identified as the central fount of expressive freedom, an elision from the controlling power of institutionalized capitalism and the state.
(15) There is an elision here in the use of the term u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510resourceu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb.
(16) Aside from occasionally adopting hubby Elvis Costello's cute little habit of syllabic elision , The Girl is character-free.
(17) The role of the analyst is to hear the voice of the unconscious, which makes itself audible through the censorship of consciousness in riddles, allusions, elisions , and omissions.
(18) But the eighty-four-minute film's more crucial faults are really its elisions and omissions, among them its failure to flesh out its distinctive characters.
(19) His work thus has the tendency to reproduce the elisions of the religious and political polemics of the sixteenth century while seeking to explain them.
(20) He puts sequences together classically, with no elisions .
exclusion
exception