Advertisement
Advertisement
eliminate
[ih-lim-uh-neyt]
verb (used with object)
to remove or get rid of, especially as being in some way undesirable.
to eliminate risks; to eliminate hunger.
to omit, especially as being unimportant or irrelevant; leave out.
I have eliminated all statistical tables, which are of interest only to the specialist.
to remove from further consideration or competition, especially by defeating in a contest.
to eradicate or kill.
to eliminate the enemy.
Physiology., to void or expel from an organism.
Mathematics., to remove (a quantity) from an equation by elimination.
eliminate
/ ɪˈlɪmɪˌneɪt /
verb
to remove or take out; get rid of
to reject as trivial or irrelevant; omit from consideration
to remove (a competitor, team, etc) from a contest, usually by defeat
slang, to murder in a cold-blooded manner
physiol to expel (waste matter) from the body
maths to remove (an unknown variable) from two or more simultaneous equations
Usage
Other Word Forms
- eliminability noun
- eliminative adjective
- noneliminative adjective
- preeliminate verb (used with object)
- uneliminated adjective
- well-eliminated adjective
- eliminant noun
- eliminator noun
- eliminable adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of eliminate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of eliminate1
Example Sentences
Wie’s group is developing versions of these robots that biodegrade after use, eliminating the need for surgical removal, and coatings that make the robots compatible with human tissue.
In 2018, California voters approved Proposition 7, which would allow the state Legislature to approve either permanent daylight saving time or permanent standard time — eliminating the annual time shifts — with a two-thirds vote.
Congress’ positions on procedural issues, such as raising the debt ceiling or eliminating the filibuster, also increasingly depend not on bedrock principles but on who occupies the White House.
"With serious opponents eliminated from the competition", Embalo's victory is a foregone conclusion, lawyer and political activist Fransual Dias told AFP.
The companies could opt to fund AI investments by eliminating share buybacks, which would mean those investments would take the ratio of capex to cash flow back to the low 70% range.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse