Yes.
No, the word eradicate (eradicates, eradicating, eradicated) is a verb, meaning to obliterate, to stamp out, to pull or tear up by the roots.The noun forms for the verb to eradicate are eradicator, eradication, and the gerund, eradicating.
I hope to eradicate the ship's vermin without threat to the crew. You may commence to eradicate... now.
how will we eradicate the war in Iraq
kill, destroy, annihilate
the farmer eradicated his weeds.
The noun forms for the verb to eradicate are eradicator, eradication, and the gerund, eradicating.
No, the word eradicate (eradicates, eradicating, eradicated) is a verb, meaning to obliterate, to stamp out, to pull or tear up by the roots.The noun forms for the verb to eradicate are eradicator, eradication, and the gerund, eradicating.
Their goal was the eradication of world hunger
Possibly you are searching for the verb: expunge?
eat eliminate emerge enroll enter eradicate erect erupt establish estimate excel expand extend extinguish
I hope to eradicate the ship's vermin without threat to the crew. You may commence to eradicate... now.
how will we eradicate the war in Iraq
I was trying to eradicate the pencil markings.
The team of doctors and researchers worked tirelessly to eradicate the disease.
It would be useful if we could eradicate people's poor English
Eradicate means to eliminate or destroy. It is usually used in the context of pests or diseases; we eradicated smallpox.
eradicate to get rid of something completely has its root in 16c:from latin eradicare to root out.