| 释义 | erasureenUK
 erasurean act of erasingNot to be confused with:eraser – something used to erase, as writing in pencil
 e·ra·sureE0194300 (ĭ-rā′shər)n.1.  The act or an instance of erasing: erasure of the blackboard.2.  A mark showing that something has been erased: The document has many erasures.erasure(ɪˈreɪʒə) n1. the act or an instance of erasing2. the place or mark, as on a piece of paper, where something has been erasede•ra•sure(ɪˈreɪ ʃər)
 n.    1.  an act or instance of erasing.    2.  a spot or mark left after erasing.  [1725–35] Thesaurus
 | Noun | 1. |  erasure - a correction made by erasing; "there were many erasures in the typescript"correction - something substituted for an error |  |  | 2. | erasure - a surface area where something has been erased; "another word had been written over the erasure"surface area, expanse, area - the extent of a 2-dimensional surface enclosed within a boundary; "the area of a rectangle"; "it was about 500 square feet in area" |  |  | 3. | erasure - deletion by an act of expunging or erasingexpunction, expungingdeletion - the act of deleting something written or printed | 
 erasurenoun deletion, wiping, wiping out, cancellation, effacing, obliteration, effacement the sudden disastrous erasure of my hard driveerasurenounThe act of erasing or the condition of being erased:cancellation, deletion, expunction, obliteration.TranslationsδιαγραφήcancellaturacancellazioneIdiomsSeeunder erasureerasureenUK
 erasureA General Medical Council (GMC) (UK) term of art for removing a medical practitioner’s name from the register of active doctors.Types of erasure
 Non-disciplinary erasure
 • Administrative erasure—erasure from the register for medical practitioners in the UK due to non-payment of registration fees.
 • Voluntary erasure—an administrative exercise by the GMC which doesn’t imply misconduct by the practitioner, but means that he/she cannot practise as a doctor in the UK.
 • Constructive erasure—a term of art referring to a series of sanctions by the GMC against a medical practitioner that are regarded as so onerous as to constitute erasure without actual erasure.
 Disciplinary (involuntary) erasure
 See there.
 ErasureenUK
 ERASURE, contracts, evidence. The obliteration of a writing; it will render it void or not under the same circumstances as an interlineation. (q.v.) Vide 5 Pet. S. C. R. 560; 11 Co. 88; 4 Cruise, Dig. 368; 13 Vin. Ab. 41; Fitzg. 207; 5 Bing. R. 183; 3 C. & P. 65; 2 Wend. R. 555; 11 Conn. R. 531; 5 M. R. 190; 2 L. R. 291 3 L. R. 56; 4 L. R. 270. 2. Erasures and interlineations are presumed to have been made after the execution of a deed, unless the contrary be proved. 1 Dall. 67; 1 Pet. 169; 4 Bin. 1; 10 Serg. & R. 64, 170, 419; 16 Serg. & R. 44.
 erasureenUK
 Synonyms for erasurenoun deletionSynonymsdeletionwipingwiping outcancellationeffacingobliterationeffacement
 Synonyms for erasurenoun the act of erasing or the condition of being erasedSynonymscancellationdeletionexpunctionobliteration
 Synonyms for erasurenoun a correction made by erasingRelated Wordsnoun a surface area where something has been erasedRelated Wordsnoun deletion by an act of expunging or erasingSynonymsRelated Words |