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eradicated

/ih-rad-i-keyt/US // ɪˈræd ɪˌkeɪt //UK // (ɪˈrædɪˌkeɪt) //

铲除了,铲除,铲除的,消除了

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    e·rad·i·cat·ed, e·rad·i·cat·ing.

    • : to remove or destroy utterly; extirpate: to eradicate smallpox throughout the world.
    • : to erase by rubbing or by means of a chemical solvent: to eradicate a spot.
    • : to pull up by the roots: to eradicate weeds.

Synonyms & Antonyms

verbdestroy; remove

Examples

  • No effective treatments were discovered by the time the disease was eradicated.

  • A farmer who aggressively eradicates all the insects on their land might be setting up an invisible desert for birds passing through.

  • Pakistan is one of the three countries in the world where polio has not been eradicated.

  • Unless the coronavirus is eradicated everywhere, she said, it will remain a threat to the United States and other countries.

  • We’ll never go back to the way things were even if the virus is eradicated.

  • We need Obama to follow through on his promise to eradicate it.

  • It might take us centuries to eradicate the sexism that powers the harassment of women on a cultural level.

  • First impressions are tough to eradicate—especially in the cutthroat world of Hollywood.

  • Erdogan had announced the move in a speech on Thursday, vowing to “eradicate Twitter.”

  • “We will eradicate Twitter”, he said during a campaign speech on Thursday.

  • You cannot all at once eradicate the deep-rooted customs and habits of any people, whoever they may be.

  • The country here is infested by guerillas, whom all our efforts cannot eradicate.

  • But he could not bequeath political capacity to his colleagues, nor could he eradicate many bad traditions of long standing.

  • I wanted to eradicate those twisted ideas, and make her good qualities her ruling ones.

  • Indeed, even in our own day it has hardly been possible to eradicate from India the custom of burning the widow of the deceased.