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She sings this song plaintively in the film, as if to ruminate on the effects of trauma and its ability to obliterate, to silence, and then quickly bring back memory.
Seymour-Jones proposes that, until her book, there has been a conspiracy to obliterate, to stigmatize as insane, the woman with whom Eliot lived in marriage from 1915 until 1933, when, returning from a year of lecturing and teaching in America, he left her.
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In everything from diplomacy to intimacy, it is easier to obliterate than to create.
He was going to obliterate it to save it.
These buildings and this intersection were obliterated to make way for the World Trade Center.
Near-saturation of the soils with deionized water resulted in further decreases in reflectance, which obliterated to varying extent the dependence of the reflectance on chunk size.
According to Haywood, the IWW was "big enough to take in the black man, the white man; big enough to take in all nationalities – an organization that will be strong enough to obliterate state boundaries; to obliterate national boundaries".
Modern architecture was invented to obliterate history, not to make it.
"We're going to use our technology to obliterate entire supply chains, to move the way people shop," he says.
To obliterate a place is to remove every physical vestige, every psychic trace, brick by brick.
Why are so many of us driven to substances to obliterate reality?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com