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Crossword clues for omission

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
omission
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
glaring omission
▪ The book’s most glaring omission is the lack of an index.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
major
▪ Despite major omissions, such as Hastings, most places that could be taxed were there, 337 of them.
▪ Its only major omission was a failure to spot the Starship virus.
▪ Any major omission will lead to a group of documents which can not be classified under the scheme.
▪ A reasoned discussion of the theory of psychoanalysis and its possible relevance to sociological theory is a major omission in sociological literature.
▪ However, our interim reports and previous chapters have shown major omissions and distortions within each of these elements.
negligent
▪ These are in relation to the degree of probability of damage occurring, negligent omissions and multiple causes of harm.
▪ This is the exception, however, and normally the plaintiff must prove the negligent act or omission.
▪ Here the discussion is confined to more general types of tortious liability, such as that arising from negligent acts or omissions.
notable
▪ One of the most notable omissions in his education and his interests was almost anything to do with the arts.
▪ Such specifics appeared to receive attention in a fairly random way, and there were notable omissions from the specifics attended to.
serious
▪ This is a serious omission because the church is both medium and message in the process of gospel communication.
▪ Even on the most expansive views of what interests should receive compensation, serious omissions stand out.
▪ This is a serious omission, given the importance of sentence lengths in determining the overall size of the prison population.
▪ However, the standard edition of Hobbes' writings is nearly 150 years old and suffers from serious defects and omissions.
▪ This was alleged to be a very serious omission, and a great handicap to the efficacy of the scheme.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Copies of the census lists were posted so omissions could be pointed out.
▪ The omission of a warning on the product's label was the result of a printing error.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Brazenly, Rumsfeld ignored the question, but it was an eloquent omission.
▪ But the omission was, none the less, a serious one.
▪ In fact, his list of credits is so extensive, it is understandable that an employer might overlook one glaring omission.
▪ In spite of variations, distortions, and omissions, humans are good at retrieving the correct pattern.
▪ Its only major omission was a failure to spot the Starship virus.
▪ There are two types of crime which will not suffice as the unlawful act: crimes of negligence and crimes of omission.
▪ There is however, one strange omission.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Omission

Omission \O*mis"sion\, n. [L. omissio: cf. F. omission. See Omit.]

  1. The act of omitting; neglect or failure to do something required by propriety or duty.

    The most natural division of all offenses is into those of omission and those of commission.
    --Addison.

  2. That which is omitted or is left undone.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
omission

late 14c., from Latin omissionem (nominative omissio) "an omitting," noun of action from past participle stem of omittere (see omit). Related: Omissible.

Wiktionary
omission

n. 1 The act of omitting. 2 The act of neglecting to perform an action one has an obligation to do. 3 Something deleted or left out. 4 Something not done or neglected. 5 (context grammar English) The shortening of a word or phrase, using an apostrophe ( ' ) to replace the missing letters, often used to approximate the sound of speech or a specific dialect.

WordNet
omission
  1. n. a mistake resulting from neglect [syn: skip]

  2. something that has been omitted; "she searched the table for omissions"

  3. any process whereby sounds are left out of spoken words or phrases [syn: deletion]

  4. neglecting to do something; leaving out or passing over something

Wikipedia
Omission (law)

An omission is a failure to act, which generally attracts different legal consequences from positive conduct. In the criminal law, an omission will constitute an actus reus and give rise to liability only when the law imposes a duty to act and the defendant is in breach of that duty. In tort law, similarly, liability will be imposed for an omission only exceptionally, when it can be established that the defendant was under a duty to act.

Omission

Omission may refer to:

  • Omission (Catholicism), a Catholic sin
  • Omission (criminal law)
  • Omission bias
  • Purposeful omission, a literary method

Usage examples of "omission".

The omission of what never was in our power cannot cause remorse, and the bewailing what never can become in our power cannot afford comfort.

Radgar leaped from the saddle, thrust the reins into the hands of a ceorl, and ran into the main house without even taking off his mud-caked boots, an omission that Queen Charlotte regarded as a capital offense in athelings.

By the aid of a friend, I also present some poems complete and correct which hitherto have been defaced by various mistakes and omissions.

No introductions took place, and I read the tact of the witty hunchback in the omission, but as all the guests were men used to the manners of the court, that neglect of etiquette did not prevent them from paying every honour to my lovely friend, who received their compliments with that ease and good breeding which are known only in France, and even there only in the highest society, with the exception, however, of a few French provinces in which the nobility, wrongly called good society, shew rather too openly the haughtiness which is characteristic of that class.

Listening to rain drum on the roof of the Ford, Dowling found the omission unfortunate.

As in the development of a fugue, where, when the subject and counter subject have been enounced, there must henceforth be nothing new, and yet all must be new, so throughout organic life - which is as a fugue developed to great length from a very simple subject - everything is linked on to and grows out of that which comes next to it in order - errors and omissions excepted.

Thanks to this omission, and in the last moments before the Finadd parted company with Kuru Qan, a crossroads was reached, and then, inexorably, a path was taken.

In the particular instance of which I have given you a relation, Mircalla seemed to be limited to a name which, if not her real one, should at least reproduce, without the omission or addition of a single letter, those, as we say, anagrammatically, which compose it.

The genial omissions and the invented details with which our textbooks retell the Pilgrim archetype are close cousins of the overt censorship practiced by the Massachusetts Department of Commerce in denying Frank James the right to speak.

And this last address became the name of the committee, now an established association, formed by a group of people who believe that human life must be respected, that the right to express your opinion and demonstrate as embodied in the Italian Constitution must be defended, that the true facts about what happened in Genoa in July 2001 must be made known and that all misreporting, censorship, and omissions in the information given out about Genoa must be denounced.

Laws and regulations multiplied like flies on a dung-heap--and the poorest and remotest Moro, who had no chance of hearing of the laws, who could not have understood the laws even if he had heard them, since they were not given in his language, was fined, manhandled and persecuted for every smallest omission or commission.

There was even an ancient duplicate of that yellow tattered scroll royally, reconfirming lands and title to John, the most distinguished of all the Caradocs, who had unfortunately neglected to be born in wedlock, by one of those humorous omissions to be found in the genealogies of most old families.

Go critically over what you write and strike out every word, phrase and clause the omission of which impairs neither the clearness nor force of the sentence and so avoid redundancy, tautology and circumlocution.

Trish offered no account of where she had been, and Torry allowed the omission to pass.

The omission to comply with any of these restrictions and requirements would automatically cancel my parole and subject me to arrest and re-imprisonment for the unexpired period of the original sentence.