Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Third-person singular simple present indicative form of
omit .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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The modern acceptance of the term omits all those gentle qualities of mind which go to make the true chivalric disposition.
The Book-Hunter at Home P. B. M. Allan
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One he omits is a little gem, discussed here, that authorizes private citizen suits to force greater enforcement by Arizona government agencies.
The Volokh Conspiracy » Kobach on Arizona’s Immigration Law 2010
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One he omits is a little gem, discussed here, that authorizes private citizen suits to force greater enforcement by Arizona government agencies.
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Her question is: "what the article omits is what the effect is on the patients sitting in the waiting room for the internist who has now spent an hour for a 20 minute appointment, and the cardiologist who has also left patients in the waiting room."
Time's running out on that summer reading list (Jack Bog's Blog) 2009
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What he omits is that the accepted cost by the city are on par with what we would have to accept with the surface option.
Open Letter to the Council: Take the Same Damn Risk You’re Asking Us To Take « PubliCola 2010
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What it omits is that ACA was using that experience analyzing credit risk to deliberately put together a terrible portfolio.
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In line two, Garibay omits the Spanish word Dios and places it in brackets at the end of the line, which he translates: "Donde resuenan los cascabeles el polvo sube:/es deleitado el Dios, dador de vida."
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In line two, Garibay omits the Spanish word Dios and places it in brackets at the end of the line, which he translates: "Donde resuenan los cascabeles el polvo sube:/es deleitado el Dios, dador de vida."
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What it omits is that she married to get married (and I can understand THAT being a concept to wait to introduce to younger readers), the death of one her babies, and the problems with her sons.
Lucy Maud Montgomery: The Author of Anne of Green Gables 2007
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That's all well and good, but what Keyes omits is the subsequent history of the country, and in particular the effect of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Balkinization 2003
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