(Datenverarbeitung) Aufnahmen auf Ton- oder Bildträgern tilgen.
(Schiffahrt) Ein Schiff entladen.
(Recht) Eine Eintragung (z.B. im Handelsregister, Grundbuch) tilgen.
(Brandbekämpfung) Einen Brand bekämpfen.
1. To remove objects of obstruction
2. To clear from impurities, blemishes, pollution, etc.
3. To go away or disappear
4. To make a way or path by removing objects:
5. To make clear, bright, light, or translucent
6. To pass by, over, or under without making contact; SYN. top.
7. To remove (people) from a building
8. To remove the occupants of
9. To rid of instructions or data
10. To sell
11. To settle, as of a debt
12. To free from payment of customs duties, as of a shipment
13. To pass an inspection or receive authorization
14. To be debited and credited to the proper bank accounts
To restore a device to a prescribed initial state, usually the zero state.
To remove or make invisible; SYN. cancel.
Remove or erase. In computing, the deletion of a character removes it from the file; the deletion of a file normally means removing its directory entry, rather than actually deleting it from the disc. Many systems now have an undelete facility that allows the restoration of the directory entry. While deleted files may not have been removed from the disc, they can be overwritten.
1. To remove by or as if by rubbing or erasing; SYN. rub out, score out, efface, wipe off.
2. To remove from memory or existence; SYN. wipe out.
3. To wipe out magnetically recorded information; SYN. delete.
1. To blot out, as with pen; to rub out; to efface designedly; to obliterate; to strike out wholly.
2. To strike out; to wipe out or destroy; to annihilate.
3. Blot, cross, rub or wipe out.
To put out or quench, as of fires or lights; SYN. obliterate.
1. To cause to die; put to death
2. To deprive of life
3. To destroy a vitally essential quality of or in
4. To be fatal
5. To thwart the passage of; SYN. defeat, vote down, vote out.
6. To tire out completely
7. To be the source of great pain for
8. To hit with great force, in sports
9. To cause to cease operating
10. To hit with so much force as to make a return impossible, in racket games
11. To mark for deletion or rule out; SYN. obliterate, wipe out.
12. To overwhelm with hilarity, pleasure, or admiration
To satisfy (thirst); SYN. slake, allay, assuage.
1. To erase; to obliterate
2. To destroy completely; specifically; kill, murder
1. To scrape or dig with the claws or nails
2. To rub and tear or mark the surface of with something sharp or jagged
3. To scrape or rub lightly (as to relieve itching); to act on (a desire) — used with itch
4. To scrape together; collect with difficulty or by effort
5. To write or draw on a surface
6. To cancel or erase by or as if by drawing a line through; to withdraw (an entry) from competition
7. Scribble, scrawl
8. To scrape along a rough surface
9. To use the claws or nails in digging, tearing, or wounding
10. To scrape or rub oneself lightly (as to relieve itching)
11. To gather money or make a living by hard work and especially through irregular means and sacrifice
12. To make a thin grating sound; to produce a rhythmic scratching sound by moving a phonograph record back and forth under a phonograph needle
13. To withdraw from a contest or engagement
14. To make a scratch in billiards or pool
15. To cut the surface of; wear away the surface of; SYN. scrape, scratch up.
To make less active or intense; SYN. abate, slack.
1. To get rid of, destroy, or kill especially with or as if with sudden force.
2. To hit with or as if with a sudden concentrated application of force or energy.
3. To irradiate especially with microwaves.
4. To propel suddenly or speedily.
5. To transport instantaneously.
6. To avoid watching (as a television commercial) by changing channels especially with a remote control or by fast-forwarding a videotape.
7. To move with speed or force.
8. To change television channels using a remote control.