What is another word for effacement?

Pronunciation: [ɪfˈe͡ɪsmənt] (IPA)

Effacement is a term that is often used in medical and obstetric contexts, referring to the thinning and softening of the cervix before and during childbirth. However, in everyday language, effacement has several synonyms that can be used interchangeably to convey the idea of something being erased, concealed, or suppressed. Some of these synonyms include obliteration, eradication, wiping out, elimination, deletion, annihilation, submergence, and even sublimation, which refers to converting something negative or harmful into a more positive or productive outcome. Whether used in a medical or figurative sense, these synonyms for effacement can help to convey complex ideas that are essential for clear communication.

What are the hypernyms for Effacement?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the hyponyms for Effacement?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.

What are the holonyms for Effacement?

Holonyms are words that denote a whole whose part is denoted by another word.

Usage examples for Effacement

A sunny autumn morning is exercising its genial influence, and the courage of self-effacement awakens in her.
"A Handbook to the Works of Browning (6th ed.)"
Mrs. Sutherland Orr
In spite of self-effacement, therefore, the career of a permanent official is honourable and attractive.
"The Government of England (Vol. I)"
A. Lawrence Lowell
Besides, she had been trained in a healthy self-effacement.
"The Pastor's Wife"
Elizabeth von Arnim

Famous quotes with Effacement

  • Mark this well, you proud men of action: You are nothing but the unwitting agents of the men of thought who often, in quiet self-effacement, mark out most exactly all your doings in advance.
    Heinrich Heine
  • You have spoken much today of my self-sacrifice and devotion to my country. I have heard that kind of speech ever since I came out of jail, but I hear it with embarrassment, with something of pain. For I know my weakness, I am a prey to my own faults and backslidings. I was not blind to them before and when they all rose up against me in seclusion, I felt them utterly. I knew them that I the man was a man of weakness, a faulty and imperfect instrument, strong only when a higher strength entered into me. Then I found myself among these young men and in many of them I discovered a mighty courage, a power of self-effacement in comparison with which I was simply nothing. I saw one or two who were not only superior to me in force and character, - very many were that, — but in the promise of that intellectual ability on which I prided myself.
    Sri Aurobindo
  • All this slowness, all this hardness, The nearness that is waiting in my bed, The gradual self-effacement of the dead.
    Alun Lewis
  • What is this televisual mastery of Reagan's? It is a celebration of good intentions and unexceptional abilities. His style is one of hammy self-effacement, a wry dismay at his own limited talents and their drastic elevation.
    Martin Amis
  • After September 11, then, writers faced quantitative change, but not qualitative change. In the following days and weeks, the voices coming from their rooms were very quiet; still, they were individual voices, and playfully rational, all espousing the ideology of no ideology. They stood in eternal opposition to the voice of the lonely crowd, which, with its yearning for both power and effacement, is the most desolate sound you will ever hear. "Desolate": "giving an impression of bleak and dismal emptiness... from L. desolat-, desolare 'abandon', from de- 'thoroughly' + solus 'alone'."
    Martin Amis

Related words: effacement in pregnancy, effacement in labor, effacement in cervical cancer, effacement during pregnancy, is effacement normal during pregnancy, how to know if your effacement is thinning, signs of effacement in pregnancy

Related questions:

  • What does effacement mean?
  • How can you tell if your effacement is thinning?
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