(1) A correction made by erasing
(2) A surface area where something has been erased
(3) Deletion by an act of expunging or erasing
(1) It will only be these rough notes which will be liable to erasure .
(2) Faith in American virtue remains intact, and the erasure of collective memory is stunning.
(3) Postmodern psychology argues for the erasure of the category of self.
(4) The erasure of prior history
(5) The crucial detail is the erasure of the serial numbers.
(6) This willful erasure seems to represent the deliberate amnesia of a society that does not want to remember.
(7) Regardless of who is at fault, it is clear that never before in jazz has a movie caused the actual erasure of important music.
(8) On the one hand, Pope's symbolic erasure of "Madam Dacier" anticipates her misconstrued legacy.
(9) The duration of time they will be retained before erasure or destruction should be specified.
(10) The judges recorded their diving scores on cardboard "with a lot of erasure ," she said.
(11) DVD-R is a write-once format, meaning that data can be written to a disc and stored without fear of accidental erasure .
(12) The process of historical erasure may have started then.
(13) Some of these supraliminal frames are panels of video static, a screen equivalent of total erasure .
(14) Others found comfort in the erasure of the recent past.
(15) Regardless of popular calls for the erasure of African identity, I steadfastly remain of African descent.
(16) It is a question not of temporal displacement but rather the erasure of narrative time itself.
(17) In the years since 1981, I have seen both significant erasures and wholesale additions.
(18) Erasure , like silence, suggests a sweeping lack of authority by owning up to a loss of control.
(19) Avoid blots and erasures ; they indicate carelessness or unbecoming haste.
(20) With painstaking penmanship and a few erasures to correct spellings and numbers, the little girl explained herself.
expunction
expunging