It is witty and absurd, a self-portrait which effaces individuality with a universal representation of it. |
There is the anger of not being? There is happiness, which for them effaces the other worlds. |
He consequently suffuses his speech with a rhetoric that effaces differences among Celts and Saxons. |
Seeing the work as a crude forebear of Elizabethan tragic drama effaces its status as an instance of de casibus literature. |
Little by little, the tide of houses, always thrust from the heart of the city outwards, overflows, devours, wears away, and effaces this wall. |
Such work slows down the mind, effaces the urge for digital updates and takes one back in human time. |