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Synonyms of the word 
ELIMINATE → ANNIHILATE - BEAT - CRUSH - DECIMATE - DESTROY - DESTRUCT - DISCHARGE - EGEST - EJECT - ERADICATE - EXCRETE - EXPEL - EXTINGUISH - KILL - OBVIATE - PASS - REJECT - RELEASE - REMOVE - SHELL - TAKE - TROUNCE - VANQUISH - WITHDRAWeliminate- v. (transitive) To completely destroy (something) so that it no longer exists.
- v. (slang) To kill (a person or animal).
- v. (physiology) To excrete (waste products).
- v. To exclude (from investigation or from further competition).
- v. (accounting) To record amounts in a consolidation statement to remove the effects of inter-company transactions.
annihilate- v. To reduce to nothing, to be nothing, to destroy, to eradicate.
- v. (particle physics) To react with antimatter, producing gamma radiation.
- v. (archaic) To treat as worthless, to vilify.
beat- n. A stroke; a blow.
- n. A pulsation or throb.
- n. A pulse on the beat level, the metric level at which pulses are heard as the basic unit. Thus a beat is…
- n. A rhythm.
- n. The interference between two tones of almost equal frequency.
- n. A short pause in a play, screenplay, or teleplay, for dramatic or comedic effect.
- n. The route patrolled by a police officer or a guard.
- n. (by extension) An area of a person's responsibility, especially.
- n. (dated) An act of reporting news or scientific results before a rival; a scoop.
- n. (colloquial, dated) That which beats, or surpasses, another or others.
- n. (dated) A place of habitual or frequent resort.
- n. (archaic) A low cheat or swindler.
- n. The instrumental portion of a piece of hip-hop music.
- n. (hunting) The act of scouring, or ranging over, a tract of land to rouse or drive out game; also, those…
- n. (fencing) A smart tap on the adversary's blade.
- v. (transitive) To hit; to knock; to pound; to strike.
- v. (transitive) To strike or pound repeatedly, usually in some sort of rhythm.
- v. (intransitive) To strike repeatedly; to inflict repeated blows; to knock vigorously or loudly.
- v. (intransitive) To move with pulsation or throbbing.
- v. (transitive) To win against; to defeat or overcome; to do better than, outdo, or excel (someone) in a…
- v. (intransitive, nautical) To sail to windward using a series of alternate tacks across the wind.
- v. (transitive) To strike (water, foliage etc.) in order to drive out game; to travel through (a forest etc…
- v. To mix food in a rapid fashion. Compare whip.
- v. (transitive, Britain, In haggling for a price) of a buyer, to persuade the seller to reduce a price.
- v. (transitive) To indicate by beating or drumming.
- v. To tread, as a path.
- v. To exercise severely; to perplex; to trouble.
- v. To be in agitation or doubt.
- v. To make a sound when struck.
- v. (military, intransitive) To make a succession of strokes on a drum.
- v. To sound with more or less rapid alternations of greater and less intensity, so as to produce a pulsating…
- v. (transitive) To arrive at a place before someone.
- adj. (US slang) exhausted.
- adj. dilapidated, beat up.
- adj. (gay slang) fabulous.
- adj. (slang) boring.
- adj. (slang, of a person) ugly.
- n. A beatnik.
crush- n. A violent collision or compression; a crash; destruction; ruin.
- n. Violent pressure, as of a moving crowd.
- n. Crowd which produces uncomfortable pressure.
- n. A violent crowding.
- n. A crowd control barrier.
- n. An infatuation or affection for.
- n. The human object of such infatuation or affection.
- n. A standing stock or cage with movable sides used to restrain livestock for safe handling.
- n. A party, festive function.
- n. (Australia) The process of crushing cane to remove the raw sugar, or the season that this process takes…
- v. To press or bruise between two hard bodies; to squeeze, so as to destroy the natural shape or integrity…
- v. To reduce to fine particles by pounding or grinding; to comminute.
- v. To overwhelm by pressure or weight; to beat or force down, as by an incumbent weight.
- v. To oppress or burden grievously.
- v. To overcome completely; to subdue totally.
- v. (intransitive) To be or become broken down or in, or pressed into a smaller compass, by external weight…
- v. To feel infatuation with or unrequited love for.
- v. (sports) to defeat emphatically.
decimate- v. (archaic) To kill one-tenth of a group, (historical, specifically) as a military punishment in the Roman…
- v. To destroy or remove one-tenth of anything.
- v. (loosely) To devastate: to reduce or destroy significantly but not completely.
- v. (obsolete) To exact a tithe or other 10% tax.
- v. (obsolete, rare) To tithe: to pay a 10% tax.
- v. (obsolete) To decimalize: to divide into tenths, hundredths etc.
- v. (proscribed) To reduce to one-tenth: to destroy or remove nine-tenths of anything.
- v. (computer graphics) To replace a high-resolution model with another of lower but acceptable quality.
- n. (obsolete) A tithe or other 10% tax or payment.
- n. (obsolete) A tenth of something.
- n. (obsolete) A set of ten items.
destroy- v. (transitive) To damage beyond use or repair.
- v. (intransitive) To cause destruction.
- v. (transitive) To neutralize, undo a property or condition.
- v. (transitive) To put down or euthanize.
- v. (transitive) To severely disrupt the well-being of (a person); ruin.
- v. (colloquial, transitive) To defeat soundly.
- v. (computing, transitive) To remove data.
destruct- v. (transitive) To intentionally cause the destruction of.
- v. (intransitive) To self-destruct.
discharge- v. To accomplish or complete, as an obligation.
- v. To free of a debt, claim, obligation, responsibility, accusation, etc.; to absolve; to acquit; to clear.
- v. To send away (a creditor) satisfied by payment; to pay one's debt or obligation to.
- v. To set aside; to annul; to dismiss.
- v. To expel or let go.
- v. To let fly, as a missile; to shoot.
- v. (electricity) To release (an accumulated charge).
- v. To relieve of an office or employment; to send away from service; to dismiss.
- v. To release legally from confinement; to set at liberty.
- v. To operate (any weapon that fires a projectile, such as a shotgun or sling).
- v. To release (an auxiliary assumption) from the list of assumptions used in arguments, and return to the…
- v. To unload a ship or another means of transport.
- v. To put forth, or remove, as a charge or burden; to take out, as that with which anything is loaded or…
- v. To give forth; to emit or send out.
- v. To let fly; to give expression to; to utter.
- v. (transitive, textiles) To bleach out or to remove or efface, as by a chemical process.
- v. (obsolete, Scotland) To prohibit; to forbid.
- n. (medicine, uncountable) pus or exudate (other than blood) from a wound or orifice, usually due to infection…
- n. the act of accomplishing (an obligation); performance.
- n. the act of expelling or letting go.
- n. (electricity) the act of releasing an accumulated charge.
- n. (medicine) the act of releasing an inpatient from hospital.
- n. (military) the act of releasing a member of the armed forces from service.
- n. (hydrology) the volume of water transported by a river in a certain amount of time, usually in units of…
egest- v. To excrete from the body.
eject- v. (transitive) To compel (a person or persons) to leave.
- v. (transitive) To throw out or remove forcefully.
- v. (US, transitive) To compel (a sports player) to leave the field because of inappropriate behaviour.
- v. (intransitive) To project oneself from an aircraft.
- v. (transitive) To cause (something) to come out of a machine.
- v. (intransitive) To come out of a machine.
- n. (uncountable) A button on a machine that causes something to be ejected from the machine.
- n. (psychology, countable) (by analogy with subject and object) an inferred object of someone else's consciousness.
eradicate- v. (transitive) To pull up by the roots; to uproot.
- v. (transitive) To completely destroy; to reduce to nothing radically; to put an end to; to extirpate.
excrete- v. (of an organism) to discharge from the system.
expel- v. To eject or erupt.
- v. (obsolete) To fire (a bullet, arrow etc.).
- v. (transitive) To remove from membership.
- v. (transitive) To deport.
extinguish- v. (transitive) to put out, as in fire; to end burning; to quench.
- v. (transitive) to destroy or abolish something.
- v. (transitive) to obscure or eclipse something.
- v. (transitive, psychology) to bring about the extinction of a conditioned reflex.
- v. (transitive, literally) to hunt down (a species) to extinction.
kill- v. (transitive) To put to death; to extinguish the life of.
- v. (transitive) To render inoperative.
- v. (transitive, figuratively) To stop, cease, or render void; to terminate.
- v. (transitive, figuratively, hyperbolic) To amaze, exceed, stun, or otherwise incapacitate.
- v. (transitive, figuratively) To produce feelings of dissatisfaction or revulsion in.
- v. (transitive) To use up or to waste.
- v. (transitive, figuratively, informal) To exert an overwhelming effect on.
- v. (transitive, figuratively, hyperbolic) To overpower, overwhelm, or defeat.
- v. (transitive) To force a company out of business.
- v. (intransitive, informal) To produce intense pain.
- v. (figuratively, informal, hyperbolic, transitive) To punish severely.
- v. (transitive, sports) To strike a ball or similar object with such force and placement as to make a shot…
- v. To succeed with an audience, especially in comedy.
- v. (mathematics, transitive, idiomatic, informal) To cause to assume the value zero.
- v. (computing, Internet, IRC, transitive) To disconnect (a user) involuntarily from the network.
- n. The act of killing.
- n. Specifically, the death blow.
- n. The result of killing; that which has been killed.
- n. (volleyball) The grounding of the ball on the opponent's court, winning the rally.
- n. A creek; a body of water; a channel or arm of the sea.
- n. A kiln.
obviate- v. (transitive) To anticipate and prevent or bypass (something which would otherwise have been necessary…
- v. (transitive) To avoid (a future problem or difficult situation).
pass- v. (heading) Physical movement.
- v. (heading) To change in state or status, to advance.
- v. (heading) To move through time.
- v. (heading) To be accepted.
- v. (intransitive) In any game, to decline to play in one's turn.
- v. (heading) To do or be better.
- v. (intransitive, obsolete) To take heed.
- n. An opening, road, or track, available for passing; especially, one through or over some dangerous or otherwise…
- n. A channel connecting a river or body of water to the sea, for example at the mouth (delta) of a river.
- n. A single movement, especially of a hand, at, over, or along anything.
- n. A single passage of a tool over something, or of something over a tool.
- n. An attempt.
- n. (fencing) A thrust or push; an attempt to stab or strike an adversary.
- n. (figuratively) A thrust; a sally of wit.
- n. A sexual advance.
- n. (sports) The act of moving the ball or puck from one player to another.
- n. (rail transport) A passing of two trains in the same direction on a single track, when one is put into…
- n. Permission or license to pass, or to go and come.
- n. A document granting permission to pass or to go and come; a passport; a ticket permitting free transit…
- n. (baseball) An intentional walk.
- n. The state of things; condition; predicament; impasse.
- n. (obsolete) Estimation; character.
- n. (obsolete, Chaucer) A part, a division. Compare passus.
- n. (cooking) The area in a restaurant kitchen where the finished dishes are passed from the chefs to the…
- n. An act of declining to play one's turn in a game, often by saying the word "pass".
- n. (computing) A run through a document as part of a translation, compilation or reformatting process.
- n. (computing, slang) A password (especially one for a restricted-access website).
reject- v. (transitive) To refuse to accept.
- v. (basketball) To block a shot, especially if it sends the ball off the court.
- n. Something that is rejected.
- n. (derogatory slang) An unpopular person.
release- n. The event of setting (someone or something) free (e.g. hostages, slaves, prisoners, caged animals, hooked…
- n. (software) The distribution of an initial or new and upgraded version of a computer software product;…
- n. Anything recently released or made available (as for sale).
- n. That which is released, untied or let go.
- n. (biochemistry) The process by which a chemical substance is set free.
- n. (phonetics, sound synthesis) The act or manner of ending a sound.
- n. (railways, historical) In the block system, a printed card conveying information and instructions to be…
- n. A device adapted to hold or release a device or mechanism as required.
- v. To let go (of); to cease to hold or contain.
- v. To make available to the public.
- v. To free or liberate; to set free.
- v. To discharge.
- v. (telephony) (of a call) To hang up.
- v. (law) To let go, as a legal claim; to discharge or relinquish a right to, as lands or tenements, by conveying…
- v. To loosen; to relax; to remove the obligation of.
- v. (soccer) To set up; to provide with a goal-scoring opportunity.
- v. (biochemistry) To set free a chemical substance.
- v. (transitive) To lease again; to grant a new lease of; to let back.
remove- v. (transitive) To move something from one place to another, especially to take away.
- v. (transitive) To murder.
- v. (cricket, transitive) To dismiss a batsman.
- v. (transitive) To discard, set aside, especially something abstract (a thought, feeling, etc.).
- v. (intransitive, now rare) To depart, leave.
- v. (intransitive) To change one's residence; to move.
- v. To dismiss or discharge from office.
- n. The act of removing something.
- n. (archaic) Removing a dish at a meal in order to replace it with the next course, a dish thus replaced,…
- n. (Britain) (at some public schools) A division of the school, especially the form prior to last.
- n. A step or gradation (as in the phrase "at one remove").
- n. Distance in time or space; interval.
- n. (dated) The transfer of one's home or business to another place; a move.
- n. The act of resetting a horse's shoe.
shell- n. A hard external covering of an animal.
- n. The hard calcareous covering of a bird egg.
- n. One of the outer layers of skin of an onion.
- n. The hard external covering of various plant seed forms.
- n. The accreted mineral formed around a hollow geode.
- n. The casing of a self-contained single-unit artillery projectile.
- n. A hollow usually spherical or cylindrical projectile fired from a siege mortar or a smoothbore cannon…
- n. The cartridge of a breechloading firearm; a load; a bullet; a round.
- n. Any slight hollow structure; a framework, or exterior structure, regarded as not complete or filled in,…
- n. A garment, usually worn by women, such as a shirt, blouse, or top, with short sleeves or no sleeves, that…
- n. A coarse or flimsy coffin; a thin interior coffin enclosed within a more substantial one.
- n. (music) A string instrument, as a lyre, whose acoustical chamber is formed like a shell.
- n. (music) The body of a drum; the often wooden, often cylindrical acoustic chamber, with or without rims…
- n. An engraved copper roller used in print works.
- n. (nautical) The watertight outer covering of the hull of a vessel, often made with planking or metal plating.
- n. (nautical, rigging) The outer frame or case of a block within which the sheaves revolve.
- n. (nautical) A light boat whose frame is covered with thin wood, impermeable fabric, or water-proofed paper;…
- n. (computing) An operating system software user interface, whose primary purpose is to launch other programs…
- n. (chemistry) A set of atomic orbitals that have the same principal quantum number.
- n. An emaciated person.
- n. A psychological barrier to social interaction.
- n. (business) A legal entity that has no operations.
- n. A concave rough cast-iron tool in which a convex lens is ground to shape.
- n. (engineering) A gouge bit or shell bit.
- v. To remove the outer covering or shell of something. See sheller.
- v. To bombard, to fire projectiles at, especially with artillery.
- v. (informal) To disburse or give up money, to pay. (Often used with out).
- v. (intransitive) To fall off, as a shell, crust, etc.
- v. (intransitive) To cast the shell, or exterior covering; to fall out of the pod or husk.
- v. (computing, intransitive) To switch to a shell or command line.
- v. To form shallow, irregular cracks (in a coating).
- v. (topology) To form a shelling.
take- v. (transitive) To get into one's hands, possession, or control, with or without force.
- v. (transitive) To receive or accept (something) (especially something given or bestowed, awarded, etc).
- v. (transitive) To remove.
- v. (transitive) To have sex with.
- v. (transitive) To defeat (someone or something) in a fight.
- v. (transitive) To grasp or grip.
- v. (transitive) To select or choose; to pick.
- v. (transitive) To adopt (select) as one's own.
- v. (transitive) To carry or lead (something or someone).
- v. (transitive) To use as a means of transportation.
- v. (obsolete) To visit; to include in a course of travel.
- v. (transitive) To obtain for use by payment or lease.
- v. (transitive) To consume.
- v. (transitive) To experience, undergo, or endure.
- v. (transitive) To cause to change to a specified state or condition.
- v. (transitive) To regard in a specified way.
- v. (transitive) To conclude or form (a decision or an opinion) in the mind.
- v. (transitive) To understand (especially in a specified way).
- v. (transitive) To accept or be given (rightly or wrongly); assume (especially as if by right).
- v. (transitive) To believe, to accept the statements of.
- v. (transitive) To assume or suppose; to reckon; to regard or consider.
- v. (transitive) To draw, derive, or deduce (a meaning from something).
- v. (transitive) To derive (as a title); to obtain from a source.
- v. (transitive) To catch or contract (an illness, etc).
- v. (transitive) To come upon or catch (in a particular state or situation).
- v. (transitive) To captivate or charm; to gain or secure the interest or affection of.
- v. (transitive, of cloth, paper, etc) To absorb or be impregnated by (dye, ink, etc); to be susceptible to…
- v. (transitive, of a ship) To let in (water).
- v. (transitive) To require.
- v. (transitive) To proceed to fill.
- v. (transitive) To fill, to use up (time or space).
- v. (transitive) To avail oneself of.
- v. (transitive) To perform, to do.
- v. (transitive) To assume or perform (a form or role).
- v. (transitive) To bind oneself by.
- v. (transitive) To move into.
- v. (transitive) To go into, through, or along.
- v. (transitive) To have or take recourse to.
- v. (transitive) To ascertain or determine by measurement, examination or inquiry.
- v. (transitive) To write down; to get in, or as if in, writing.
- v. (transitive) To make (a photograph, film, or other reproduction of something).
- v. (transitive, dated) To take a picture, photograph, etc of (a person, scene, etc).
- v. (transitive) To obtain money from, especially by swindling.
- v. (transitive, now chiefly by enrolling in a class or course) To apply oneself to the study of.
- v. (transitive) To deal with.
- v. (transitive) To consider in a particular way, or to consider as an example.
- v. (transitive, baseball) To decline to swing at (a pitched ball); to refrain from hitting at, and allow…
- v. (transitive, grammar) To have an be used with (a certain grammatical form, etc).
- v. (intransitive) To get or accept (something) into one's possession.
- v. (intransitive) To engage, take hold or have effect.
- v. (intransitive) To become; to be affected in a specified way.
- v. (intransitive, possibly dated) To be able to be accurately or beautifully photographed.
- v. (intransitive, dialectal, proscribed) An intensifier.
- v. (transitive, obsolete) To deliver, give (something) to (someone).
- v. (transitive, obsolete outside dialects and slang) To give or deliver (a blow, to someone); to strike or…
- n. The or an act of taking.
- n. Something that is taken; a haul.
- n. An interpretation or view, opinion or assessment; perspective.
- n. An approach, a (distinct) treatment.
- n. (film) A scene recorded (filmed) at one time, without an interruption or break; a recording of such a…
- n. (music) A recording of a musical performance made during an uninterrupted single recording period.
- n. A visible (facial) response to something, especially something unexpected; a facial gesture in response…
- n. (medicine) An instance of successful inoculation/vaccination.
- n. (rugby, cricket) A catch of the ball (in cricket, especially one by the wicket-keeper).
- n. (printing) The quantity of copy given to a compositor at one time.
trounce- v. (transitive) to win against (someone) by a wide margin; to beat thoroughly, to defeat heavily.
- v. (transitive) to punish.
- v. (transitive) to beat severely; thrash.
vanquish- v. To defeat, to overcome.
withdraw- v. (transitive) To pull (something) back, aside, or away.
- v. (transitive) To take back (a comment, etc).
- v. (transitive) To remove, to stop providing (one's support, etc).
- v. (transitive) To extract (money from an account).
- v. (intransitive) To retreat.
- v. (intransitive) To be in withdrawal from an addictive drug etc.
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