¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Erasions
1. erasion [n] - See also: erasion
Lexicographical Neighbors of Erasions
Literary usage of Erasions
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Edinburgh Medical Journal (1899)
"In the third series, that of excisions and erasions of the knee- joint, there
are also interesting comparisons. The operations themselves are virtually the ..."
2. Commercial Handbook of France by Frederick Martin (1867)
"In those portions of the shore so protected the erasions have ceased, and the
depth of water tends constantly to diminish in front of the work, ..."
3. American Book Prices Current (1921)
"Folded sheets in hf. lev. mor. portfolio (Thackeray's own proofs with erasions,
insertions and notes by his hand), Du Bois, G., Nov. 17. '19. (396) $650.00. ..."
4. Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors by Charles Wells Moulton (1910)
"They are almost illegible owing to the great number of erasions, corrections, etc.
Mr. Roe was a believer in Ben Jonson's saying: “Easy writing makes hard ..."
5. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1876)
"In the chapter on pathology, however, erasions might now be made with advantage
to the work, and certain deficiencies supplied. ..."
6. The Bookman (1897)
"When at Oxford, he saw Milton's MSS. o( L'Allegro, etc., and was grieved to find
from the corrections and erasions how the poet had laboured upon them. ..."
7. The Connoisseur by George Colman, B. Thornton (1907)
"... the original privately printed first draft of the play, interleaved, and having
numerous MS. erasions, alterations, and additions in the author's ..."