August 12, 2004, 19:30
KallehElide
Elide means to slur over in pronunciation or to strike out something that is written.
However, I haven't seen it used as I saw it today:
"...Republicans have so successfully turned 'liberal' into a four lettered wrod that even liberals tend to shun the term and
elide their own proud history."
Now, I do see that it can mean "To eliminate or leave out of consideration," so it is used correctly. I just haven't seen it used that way, have you? Is it more a general word than I have thought? I had always thought it to be more of a technical word.
August 13, 2004, 00:30
aputI've only ever seen it in the phonetic sense, but the dictionary says it can mean 'strike out, suppress'. I hadn't made the connexion with 'collide': the root is 'strike'.
August 13, 2004, 01:16
arnieI can't bring to mind an example, but I have certainly seen "elide" used in the way Kalleh mentions, in addition to its use phonetically.
August 15, 2004, 06:42
VirgeThe 'strike out, suppress' sense of the word came out strongly in early March this year:
quote:
When David Kay walked into the US Senate in late January, the question of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction had become entangled in a thick forest of evasions, euphemisms and elisions.
From
Guardian UnlimitedThe expression "evasions, euphemisms and elisions" had a ring to it and inspired a limerick. (Probably too political to include here.)