Remove

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Possible Answers: RID, OUST, DETACH, ERASE, DELE, SHED, LOP, STRIP, CLEAR, DELETE, WIPE, EVICT, DOFF, EXPEL, ICINESS, ELIMINATE, CLEARAWAY.

Last seen on the crossword puzzle: –Daily Boston Globe Crossword Answers Sunday, 18 February 2024

Last seen on: –The New Yorker Monday, 19 June 2023 Crossword Answers
The New Yorker Wednesday, 3 May 2023 Crossword Answers
Wall Street Journal Crossword – November 02 2022 – There’s Nothing Left
L.A. Times Daily Crossword – Aug 2 2022
Wall Street Journal Crossword – January 12 2022 – Pending Action
LA Times Crossword 31 Jul 21, Saturday
Wall Street Journal Crossword – June 23 2020 – Show Me the Way
Wall Street Journal Crossword – April 18 2020 – It’s a Start
LA Times Crossword 4 Aug 19, Sunday
Wall Street Journal Crossword – August 02 2019 – Surrounded by Loved Ones
Universal Crossword – Nov 17 2018

Random information on the term “RID”:

Isaiah di Trani ben Mali (the Elder) (c. 1180 – c. 1250) (Hebrew: ישעיה בן מאלי הזקן דטראני‎), better known as the RID, was a prominent Italian Talmudist.

Isaiah originated in Trani (David Conforte, Ḳore ha-Dorot, p. 15a), an ancient settlement of Jewish scholarship, and lived probably in Venice. He carried on a correspondence with Simhah of Speyer and with Simḥah’s two pupils, Isaac ben Moses of Vienna (Or Zarua, i.88, 218, 220) and Abigdor Cohen of the same city. Isaiah himself probably lived for some time in the Orient. He left a learned son, David, and a daughter, with whose son, Isaiah ben Elijah di Trani, he has often been confounded.

Isaiah was a very prolific writer. He wrote: Nimmuḳim or Nimmuḳe Ḥomesh, a commentary on the Pentateuch, consisting mainly of glosses on Rashi which show him to have been, as Güdemann says, an acute critic rather than a dispassionate exegete. The work has been printed as an appendix to Azulai’s Pene Dawid (Leghorn, 1792); extracts from it have been published in Stern’s edition of the Pentateuch (Vienna, 1851) under the title Peṭure Ẓiẓẓim (see also Berliner, Rashi, p. xii); and Zedekiah ben Abraham, author of Shibbole ha-Leḳeṭ and a pupil of Isaiah, composed glosses on it in 1297 (Leipzig MS. No. 15, p. 318). As regards other Bible commentaries ascribed to him, see Isaiah di Trani the Younger. Isaiah also wrote an introduction (petiḥah) to a seliḥah beginning with [missing Hebrew text] (Maḥzor Rome, ed. Luzzatto, p. 32, Introduction), which has been metrically translated into German by Zunz (“S.P.” p. 299; see idem, Literaturgesch. p. 336).

RID on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “DELE”:

Standardised test. Available in 2 modules: “Academic”, “General training”.

The International English Language Testing System, or IELTS /ˈaɪ.ɛlts/, is an international standardised test of English language proficiency for non-native English language speakers. It is jointly managed by the British Council, IDP: IELTS Australia and Cambridge English Language Assessment, and was established in 1989. IELTS is one of the major English-language tests in the world, others being the TOEFL, TOEIC, PTE:A and OPI/OPIc.

IELTS is accepted by most Australian, British, Canadian and New Zealand academic institutions, by over 3,000 academic institutions in the United States, and by various professional organisations across the world.

IELTS is the only Secure English Language Test approved by UK Visas and Immigration (UKVI) for visa customers applying both outside and inside the UK. It is also a requirement for immigration to Australia and New Zealand. In Canada, IELTS, TEF, or CELPIP are accepted by the immigration authority.

DELE on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “LOP”:

The law of one price (LoP) is an economic concept which posits that “a good must sell for the same price in all locations”. This law is derived from the assumption of the inevitable elimination of all arbitrage.[additional citation needed]

The law of one price constitutes the basis of the theory of purchasing power parity, an assumption that in some circumstances (for example, as a long-run tendency) it would cost exactly the same number of, for example, US dollars to buy euros and then to use the proceeds to buy a market basket of goods as it would cost to use those dollars directly in purchasing the market basket of goods.[additional citation needed]

The law of one price has been applied towards the analysis of many public events such as:

The intuition behind the law of one price is based on the assumption that differences between prices are eliminated by market participants taking advantage of arbitrage opportunities.[additional citation needed]

LOP on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “CLEAR”:

clear is a standard Unix computer operating system command which is used to clear the screen.

Depending on the system, clear uses the terminfo or termcap database, as well as looking into the environment for the terminal type in order to deduce how to clear the screen. The Unix command clear takes no arguments and is roughly analogous to the MS-DOS command cls.

CLEAR on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “DELETE”:

File deletion is a way of removing a file from a computer’s file system.

Examples of reasons for deleting files are:

All operating systems include commands for deleting files (rm on Unix, era in CP/M and DR-DOS, del/erase in MS-DOS/PC DOS, DR-DOS, Microsoft Windows etc.). File managers also provide a convenient way of deleting files. Files may be deleted one-by-one, or a whole directory tree may be deleted.

The common problem with deleting files is accidental removal of information that later proves to be important. One way to deal with this is to back up files regularly. Erroneously deleted files may then be found in archives.

Another technique often used is not to delete files instantly, but to move them to a temporary directory whose contents can then be deleted at will. This is how the “recycle bin” or “trash can” works. Microsoft Windows and Apple’s Mac OS X, as well as some Linux distributions, all employ this strategy.

In MS-DOS, one can use the undelete command. In MS-DOS the “deleted” files are not really deleted, but only marked as deleted—so they could be undeleted during some time, until the disk blocks they used are eventually taken up by other files. This is how data recovery programs work, by scanning for files that have been marked as deleted. As the space is freed up per byte, rather than per file, this can sometimes cause data to be recovered incompletely. Defragging a drive may prevent undeletion, as the blocks used by deleted file might be overwritten since they are marked as “empty”.

DELETE on Wikipedia