Obliviate
noun
a memory charm or spell in the Harry Potter books that makes one forget
verb
to forget
v.
1660s, from Latin oblivium (see oblivion). Related: Obliviated; obliviating.
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- Oblivion
[uh-bliv-ee-uh n] /əˈblɪv i ən/ noun 1. the state of being completely forgotten or unknown: a former movie star now in oblivion. 2. the state of forgetting or of being : the oblivion of sleep. 3. the act or process of dying out; complete annihilation or extinction: If we don’t preserve their habitat, the entire […]
- Oblivious
[uh-bliv-ee-uh s] /əˈblɪv i əs/ adjective 1. unmindful; unconscious; unaware (usually followed by of or to): She was oblivious of his admiration. 2. forgetful; without remembrance or memory: oblivious of my former failure. 3. Archaic. inducing forgetfulness. /əˈblɪvɪəs/ adjective 1. foll by to or of. unaware or forgetful adj. mid-15c., from Latin obliviosus “forgetful, that […]
- Obliviously
[uh-bliv-ee-uh s] /əˈblɪv i əs/ adjective 1. unmindful; unconscious; unaware (usually followed by of or to): She was oblivious of his admiration. 2. forgetful; without remembrance or memory: oblivious of my former failure. 3. Archaic. inducing forgetfulness. /əˈblɪvɪəs/ adjective 1. foll by to or of. unaware or forgetful adj. mid-15c., from Latin obliviosus “forgetful, that […]
- Obliviousness
[uh-bliv-ee-uh s] /əˈblɪv i əs/ adjective 1. unmindful; unconscious; unaware (usually followed by of or to): She was oblivious of his admiration. 2. forgetful; without remembrance or memory: oblivious of my former failure. 3. Archaic. inducing forgetfulness. /əˈblɪvɪəs/ adjective 1. foll by to or of. unaware or forgetful adj. mid-15c., from Latin obliviosus “forgetful, that […]
- Oblog
language A small, portable, Object-oriented extension to Prolog by Margaret McDougall of EdCAAD, Dept Arch, University of Edinburgh. (1995-12-29)