Delete

from WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
delete
    v 1: remove or make invisible; "Please delete my name from your
         list" [syn: {delete}, {cancel}]
    2: wipe out digitally or magnetically recorded information; "Who
       erased the files form my hard disk?" [syn: {erase}, {delete}]
       [ant: {record}, {tape}]
    3: cut or eliminate; "she edited the juiciest scenes" [syn:
       {edit}, {blue-pencil}, {delete}]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Delete \De*lete"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Deleted}; p. pr. & vb.
   n. {Deleting}.] [L. deletus, p. p. of delere to destroy. Cf.
   1st {Dele}.]
   To blot out; to erase; to expunge; to dele; to omit.
   [1913 Webster]

         I have, therefore, . . . inserted eleven stanzas which
         do not appear in Sir Walter Scott's version, and have
         deleted eight.                           --Aytoun.
   [1913 Webster]
    
from The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
delete
erase

   1. <operating system> (Or "erase") To make a file
   inaccessible.

   Usually this operation only deletes information from the
   tables the {file system} uses to locate named files; the
   file's contents still exist on {disk} and can sometimes be
   recovered by scanning the whole disk for strings which are
   known to have been in the file.  Files created subsequently on
   the same disk are quite likely to reuse the same blocks and
   thus overwrite the deleted file's data permanently.

   2. <character> The {control character} with {ASCII} code 127.
   Usually entering this character from the keyboard deletes the
   last character typed from the {input buffer}.  Sadly there is
   great confusion between {operating systems} and keyboard
   manufacturers as to whether this function should be assigned
   to the delete or {backspace} key/character.

   The choice of code 127 (binary 1111111) is not arbitrary but
   dates back to the use of {paper tape} for input.  The delete
   key rewound the tape by one character and punched out all
   seven holes, thus obliterating whatever character was there
   before.  The tape reading software ignored any delete
   characters in the input.

   (1996-12-01)
    
from Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
105 Moby Thesaurus words for "delete":
      KO, abbreviate, abridge, abrupt, alienate, annul, black out, blot,
      blot out, blue-pencil, bowdlerize, call off, cancel, cast off,
      cast out, censor, complete, cross out, cut, cut adrift, cut off,
      cut out, dele, depart, disarticulate, disconnect, disengage,
      disjoin, disjoint, dispose of, dissociate, disunite, divide,
      divorce, drop the curtain, edit, edit out, efface, eject,
      eliminate, end off, eradicate, erase, estrange, exclude, expel,
      expunge, expurgate, extinguish, finalize, finish, fold up,
      get it over, get over with, get through with, give the quietus,
      isolate, kayo, kibosh, kill, knock out, leave, obliterate, omit,
      part, perfect, polish off, pull away, pull back, pull out,
      put paid to, raze, remove, rescind, rub out, rule out, scrag,
      scratch, scratch out, segregate, separate, sequester, set apart,
      set aside, shoot down, shut off, split, sponge, sponge out,
      stand aloof, stand apart, stand aside, step aside, strike,
      strike off, strike out, subtract, throw off, throw out, uncouple,
      unyoke, void, wipe out, withdraw, zap

    

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