| obliterate | erase; destroy fiil | en |
| obliterate | Scarcely distinct; applied to the markings of insects | en |
| obliterate | To erase or blot out; to efface; to render undecipherable, as a writing | en |
| obliterate | To wear out; to remove or destroy utterly by any means; to render imperceptible; as | en |
| obliterate | To remove completely, leaving no trace; to wipe out; to destroy | en |
| obliterate | remove completely from recognition or memory; "efface the memory of the time in the camps" | en |
| obliterate | to obliterate ideas; to obliterate the monuments of antiquity | en |
| obliterate | If you obliterate something such as a memory, emotion, or thought, you remove it completely from your mind. There was time enough to obliterate memories of how things once were for him. = eradicate | en |
| obliterate | remove completely from recognition or memory; "efface the memory of the time in the camps" do away with completely, without leaving a trace | en |
| obliterate | mark for deletion, rub off, or erase; "kill these lines in the President's speech" | en |
| obliterate | make undecipherable or imperceptible by obscuring or concealing; "a hidden message"; "a veiled threat" | en |
| obliterate | do away with completely, without leaving a trace | en |
| obliterate | reduced to nothingness | en |
| obliterate | If something obliterates an object or place, it destroys it completely. Their warheads are enough to obliterate the world several times over + obliteration oblit·era·tion the obliteration of three isolated rainforests | en |
| To obliterate | outraze | en |
| obliterated | past of obliterate | en |
| obliterates | third-person singular of obliterate | en |
| obliterating | present participle of obliterate | en |
| obliterating | making undecipherable or imperceptible; "obliterating mists"; "an obscurant bank of clouds | en |
| obliterating | making undecipherable or imperceptible; "obliterating mists"; "an obscurant bank of clouds" | en |