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  1. Dictionary
    erase
    /ɪˈreɪz/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to remove or destroy something, especially something that shows that that person or thing ever existed or happened: The president said NATO expansion would finally erase the boundary line in Europe artificially created by the Cold War. Years of hard living had blurred but not erased her girlhood beauty.

  3. Learn the meaning, synonyms, examples, and history of the verb erase, which means to rub or scrape out something written or drawn, or to remove recorded matter from a medium. See also related phrases and entries near erase.

  4. Erase means to rub or scrape out, to eliminate, or to obliterate something. It can also mean to remove data from a computer or to exclude a group or person. See synonyms, antonyms, and examples of erase.

  5. Erase means to remove, as by rubbing or wiping out, something written, recorded, or stored. Learn the synonyms, examples, and differences between erase and related terms such as delete, expunge, and cancel.

  6. Learn the meaning of erase as a verb in English, with examples of usage and pronunciation. Find out how to say erase in different languages and contexts, such as business, academic and literary.

  7. Erase means to remove or destroy something completely, such as a memory, a recording, or a mark. Learn how to use erase in different contexts, with synonyms and examples from Collins English Dictionary.

  8. When you erase something, you eliminate or delete it, often by physically wiping it out. It's easy to erase chalk from a blackboard, but not so easy to erase graffiti from the side of a building. SKIP TO CONTENT