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effacement

[ ih-feys-muhnt ]

noun

  1. the act of wiping out, erasing, or doing away with something:

    The gradual effacement of ethnic differences has often been seen as a solution to the difficulties experienced by immigrants.

  2. the act or habit of humbly keeping oneself in the background; self-effacement:

    There's nothing showy about the way this author writes; a sort of vast humility and effacement echoes through the whole book.

  3. Medicine/Medical. the thinning of bodily tissue, especially of the cervix to prepare for childbirth:

    Cervical effacement is usually nearly complete before the first phase of labor.



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Word History and Origins

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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

That effacement tries to create a counterfactual absurdity.

From

“The fight for agriculture is also the fight against rural effacement, the cry of a French people who do not want to die.”

From

The King Charles spaniel in the foreground of this scene escaped effacement.

From

Hutchinson said the issue is not just effacement — historical neglect has had a material impact on Black artists in the industry.

From

This effacement of Aldrin came about because Apollo astronauts wore visors lined with gold to protect their eyes from sunlight.

From

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effaceeffect