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erode
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
erode
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
rock erodes (away) (=its surface is gradually removed because of the action of water, wind etc )
▪ The rocks had eroded away over the years.
sth erodes rock (=it gradually removes the surface of the rock)
▪ Rainwater drained away, forming streams and rivers that began to erode the rock.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
away
▪ Many of the dark rocks stand on limestone pedestals, the surrounding rocks having been eroded away.
▪ Secondly, it is possible that the beach gravels have been eroded away since their formation.
▪ All my self-esteem, respect and confidence have been eroded away and need re-building.
▪ Other ancient rights have been eroded away.
▪ The trenches here have been left untouched, eroding away year by year.
▪ It also caps many of the Jura box-folds, where the Cretaceous succession has been eroded away.
further
▪ In the same period the power of standing committee chairmen was further eroded by the institutionalization and proliferation of sub-committees.
▪ Law and order was further eroded in April 1997.
▪ And back on the Farms of the refugees, the rain will further erode a topsoil without crops to hold it together.
gradually
▪ As science had gradually eroded the freedom of time, so it had eroded the freedom of belief.
▪ A series of predictable actions and reactions gradually erodes their adaptive resources.
▪ We can never be satisfied, gradually eroding our self-esteem and confidence further.
▪ We hope our health workers will gradually erode the fabric of their deception.
▪ These stylistic differences have gradually eroded over the years, and today regional divisions have all but disappeared.
■ NOUN
base
▪ Worse, the recent fall in the Nikkei is eroding their capital base.
▪ Mayors inherited an eroding tax base and the loss of jobs.
confidence
▪ The revelation had devastated him, eroding his confidence and his desire for her.
▪ Disagreement among experts about medical treatment in leprosy created confusion among patients and eroded their confidence in physicians.
▪ We can never be satisfied, gradually eroding our self-esteem and confidence further.
▪ This humiliation has eroded what little confidence Jean has.
inflation
▪ Sales of land began about 1540 and continued until Stuart times. Inflation eroded the revenue from land and commerce.
▪ Slow economic growth reduces the likelihood inflation will accelerate and erode the value of bonds' fixed payments.
▪ This shows how far general price inflation has eroded the level of spending shown in the detailed cash figures.
▪ Signs the economy is recovering hurt bonds by sparking concern that inflation may accelerate, eroding bonds' fixed payments.
▪ Further out, a higher inflation trend threatens, eroding these competitive gains.
▪ Indications the economy may be picking up steam hurt bonds by sparking concern inflation may accelerate, eroding bonds' fixed payments.
▪ A cooling economy reduces the risk inflation will erode the value of bonds' interest and principal payments.
▪ Stronger economic growth means inflation, which erodes the buying power of bonds' fixed payments, could be poised to rise.
margin
▪ Will a rush of aspiring new producers erode that attractive margin?
▪ First, falling values erode security margins, leading to breaches of covenant and discomfiture for lenders.
▪ The cost of planning delays With current levels of interest can rapidly erode profit margins.
▪ Sudden movements in exchange and interest rates can erode profit margins, strain your cashflow and shrink overall profits.
power
▪ Stronger economic growth means inflation, which erodes the buying power of bonds' fixed payments, could be poised to rise.
profit
▪ The cost of planning delays With current levels of interest can rapidly erode profit margins.
▪ Accumulation through dynamic expansion would be halted when the need for more workers drove up wages and eroded profits.
▪ Sudden movements in exchange and interest rates can erode profit margins, strain your cashflow and shrink overall profits.
value
▪ Slow economic growth reduces the likelihood inflation will accelerate and erode the value of bonds' fixed payments.
▪ Inflation erodes the value of bonds' fixed-income payments.
▪ That, he says, would erode the value of any exclusive agreement with Quaker.
▪ A cooling economy reduces the risk inflation will erode the value of bonds' interest and principal payments.
years
▪ These stylistic differences have gradually eroded over the years, and today regional divisions have all but disappeared.
▪ As we have seen, the civil and political elements of citizenship have been eroded in recent years.
▪ His mousy hair, on the other hand, had been eroded by the years.
■ VERB
begin
▪ Down those featureless slopes the rainwater drained, forming streams and rivers that began to erode the rock.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ A strong president would further erode the power of the Congress.
▪ Caves are formed by water eroding rock.
▪ High interest rates can gradually erode profit margins.
▪ If the river is not controlled, it will erode its banks as well as the surrounding farm land.
▪ Over the years, the value of our savings and investments has been eroded by inflation.
▪ The hard rains have eroded topsoil in the Midwest.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But as the century proceeded, these rigid differences were to some extent eroded.
▪ Houllier had matches in hand, but fixture congestion threatened to erode this advantage.
▪ If the receipt is distributed to shareholders as dividends then the capital base of the business has been eroded.
▪ Indications the economy may be picking up steam hurt bonds by sparking concern inflation may accelerate, eroding bonds' fixed payments.
▪ Is television scaring our kids, engendering violent behavior, skewing their morals and generally eroding the aesthetic standards of Western civilization?
▪ Its stock price eroded from a 52-week high of about 39 in October to a low of nearly 15 Tuesday.
▪ Purchasing power has been severely eroded.
▪ Worse, the recent fall in the Nikkei is eroding their capital base.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Erode

Erode \E*rode"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Eroded; p. pr. & vb. n. Eroding.] [L. erodere, erosum; e out + rodere to gnaw. See Rodent.]

  1. To eat into or away; to corrode; as, canker erodes the flesh. ``The blood . . . erodes the vessels.''
    --Wiseman.

    The smaller charge is more apt to . . . erode the gun.
    --Am. Cyc.

  2. (Geol. & Phys. Geog.)

    1. To wear away; as, streams and glaciers erode the land.

    2. To produce by erosion, or wearing away; as, glaciers erode U-shaped valleys.

  3. to reduce or lessen as if by eroding; as, a politician's base of support is eroded by evidence of corruption; the buying power of the dollar is eroded by inflation. [fig.]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
erode

1610s, "gnaw or eat away" (transitive), a back-formation from erosion, or else from French éroder, from Latin erodere "to gnaw away, consume," from assimilated form of ex- "away" (see ex-) + rodere "gnaw" (see rodent). Intransitive sense "become worn away" is by 1905. Related: Eroded; eroding. Originally of acids, ulcers, etc.; geological sense is from 1830.

Wiktionary
erode

vb. 1 To wear away by abrasion, corrosion or chemical reaction. 2 (cx figurative English) To destroy gradually by an ongoing process.

WordNet
erode
  1. v. become ground down or deteriorate; "Her confidence eroded" [syn: gnaw, gnaw at, eat at, wear away]

  2. remove soil or rock; "Rain eroded the terraces" [syn: eat away, fret]

Wikipedia
Erode

Erode is a city in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu. Erode is the seventh largest urban agglomeration in Tamil Nadu and is the administrative headquarters of Erode District. Located on the banks of River Kaveri, it was part of historical Kongu Nadu and has been ruled at different times by the Cheras, Early Pandyas, Medieval Cholas, Later Cholas, Vijayanagar Empire, Madurai Nayaks, kingdom of Mysore, Carnatic kingdom and the British. It is situated at the centre of the South Indian Peninsula, about southwest of the state capital Chennai and about east of Coimbatore.

Erode is an agricultural and textile hub. It is one of the largest producers of turmeric in India and is a major producer of hand-loom and knitwear. Erode is a part of the Erode Lok Sabha constituency that elects its member of parliament. The city is administered by a municipal corporation which was established in 2009.

Erode (Lok Sabha constituency)

Erode is a Lok Sabha Constituency in the state of Tamil Nadu in southern India.

Erode (State Assembly Constituency)

Erode (State Assembly Constituency) was a state assembly constituency in Tamil Nadu, India. Post delimitation in 2008, the constituency ceased to exist and was replaced by two constituencies namely Erode East and Erode West.

Usage examples of "erode".

The absolutist and patrimonial model survived in this period only with the support of a specific compromise of political forces, and its substance was eroding from the inside owing primarily to the emergence of new productive forces.

Tuff is much softer than basalt and andesite, and over the years this exposed layer has eroded away, leaving us with our wonderful hotel.

All around them were the many-colored rocks of the continental roots and glistening, fantastically eroded shapes of salt and anhydrite and gypsum.

Hand had painted them there and soft cliffs eroded with a hundred tiny cavelets along their faces.

Saddam again began to feel that the pressure was unbearable, especially as the value of the dinar continued to erode in June and July.

Zhirrzh history, threatening to erode the sense that Eldership is an absolute right that cannot be altered or taken away.

The etchant eroded crystalline sealant, staining the corroded surface in green, orange, violet.

But immediately after the young mountains were born, the rain and the glaciers had begun their work, gouging and eroding, washing the mountains back to the sea: On this turbulent planet, rock flowed like water, and mountain ranges rose and fell like dreams.

Even at a fast walk it would be more than two hours before they reached the eroded artificial hill where the Big House at Hyve had stood.

Lombo scooped Nacker up in an arm and led the procession that wound up the hill, through alleys and unpaved streets with eroded gullies on either side.

It sends in the first aid crew to revegetate the area and cover the poor oxidizing and eroding, bare soil.

More stone monuments dotted the landscapes, ages old, their circular signs eroded by weather or ripicolous lichens.

One of my favorite rides was to go down through the sammit fields to the much eroded badlands at the northwestern edge of the Demesne where the flood-chucks were at work.

By the landmarks she gives him - a vegetable stand, a pond rimmed with willows, a double silo close to the road - he feels his way through the tummocks and swales of red earth crowded with shimmering green growth, merciless vegetation that allows not even the crusty eroded road embankments to rest barren but makes them bear tufts and mats of vetch and honeysuckle vines and fills the stagnant hot air with the haze of exhaled vapor.

One after another they found them, the rock face eroded in a pattern like an ear of ripe wheat, the hundred-foot-tall fir, dead some twenty years at least, that still stood stark and black on a hill top, an enormous boulder split by ancient ice with a young tree growing twixt the two halves.