释义 |
obliterated
o·blit·er·ate O0011700 (ə-blĭt′ə-rāt′, ō-blĭt′-)tr.v. o·blit·er·at·ed, o·blit·er·at·ing, o·blit·er·ates 1. To remove or destroy completely so as to leave no trace. See Synonyms at annihilate.2. To render invisible or unreadable, as by erasing or marking over: "The name [on the door] had been crudely obliterated with thick, heavy strokes of black paint" (F. Paul Wilson).3. Medicine To remove completely (a body organ or part), as by surgery, disease, or radiation. [Latin oblitterāre, oblitterāt-, to erase, from ob litterās (scrībere), (to write) over letters (ob, over; see ob- + litterās, accusative pl. of littera, letter) and from oblītus, past participle of oblīvīscī, to forget; see oblivion.] o·blit′er·a′tion n.o·blit′er·a′tive (-ə-rā′tĭv, -ər-ə-tĭv) adj.o·blit′er·a′tor n.ThesaurusAdj. | 1. | obliterated - reduced to nothingnessblotted out, obliteratedestroyed - spoiled or ruined or demolished; "war left many cities destroyed"; "Alzheimer's is responsible for her destroyed mind" |
obliterated
obliteratedslang Extremely drunk. They kept feeding me shots of tequila on my birthday, so I was completely obliterated by the end of the night.See also: obliterateobliterated mod. drunk. Fred was obliterated and couldn’t walk to his car, let alone drive it. See also: obliterateMedicalSeeobliterateobliterated Related to obliterated: Obliterated umbilical arterySynonyms for obliteratedadj reduced to nothingnessSynonymsRelated Words |