Effacement
1effacement — [ efasmɑ̃ ] n. m. • esfacement XIIIe; de effacer 1 ♦ Action d effacer; son résultat. Effacement accidentel d un fichier informatique. ⇒ destruction, disparition. Ling. Ellipse syntaxique. ♢ Fig. L effacement d un souvenir. 2 ♦ Action de s effacer …
2Effacement — may refer to: Histology Effacement (histology), the shortening, or thinning, of a tissue. Cervical effacement, the thinning of the cervix. Paleontology Effacement, an evolutionary trend resulting in the loss of surface detail in trilobites …
3Effacement — Ef*face ment, n. [Cf. F. effacement.] The act if effacing; also, the result of the act. [1913 Webster] …
4effacement — index annulment, defacement, dissolution (termination) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
5effacement — Effacement, Obliteratio, Deletio …
6effacement — (è fa se man) s. m. 1° Action d effacer ; résultat de cette action. L effacement de l écriture. 2° Fig. • Qu est ce que le jeûne, sinon l effacement de nos offenses ?, BOUHOURS Nouv. rem.. 3° Perte de l empreinte propre. L effacement des… …
7EFFACEMENT — n. m. Action d’effacer, de s’effacer. Dans ce manuscrit, l’effacement des lettres rend la lecture presque impossible. Fig., L’effacement des impressions, des caractères. Rester dans un effacement volontaire …
8effacement — noun a) withdrawal in order to make oneself inconspicuous Native Americans seem to have always placed great value on silence and direct experience, and in indigenous cultures in general, silence denotes respect and self effacement. b) A… …
9effacement — trynimas statusas T sritis automatika atitikmenys: angl. erasure vok. Löschung, f rus. стирание, n pranc. effacement, m …
10effacement — efface ► VERB 1) erase (a mark) from a surface. 2) (efface oneself) make oneself appear insignificant or inconspicuous. DERIVATIVES effacement noun. ORIGIN originally in the sense «pardon or be absolved from (an offence)»: from French effacer,… …