[
US
/oʊˈmɪt/
]
[ UK /əʊmˈɪt/ ]
[ UK /əʊmˈɪt/ ]
VERB
-
prevent from being included or considered or accepted
The bad results were excluded from the report
Leave off the top piece -
leave undone or leave out
The workers on the conveyor belt miss one out of ten
How could I miss that typo?
How To Use omit In A Sentence
- Two years later she was omitted from the European squad that relinquished the trophy in Minnesota.
- Inhaling sandalwood oil lessens stress and can stop vomiting.
- In some cases, the vomited milk may smell curdled because it has mixed with stomach acid.
- Position them on their sides to prevent them from choking on vomitus.
- The appropriate specimens to submit for testing include food (in the original container if it is available) or environmental specimens, stool, serum, gastric contents, or vomitus.
- Remember, your PJs can be a fomite an inanimate object that will transmit disease. Margie Goldsmith: When Traveling, B Is for "Bedbug," not "Baggage"
- For instance, the man Peasley might have omitted the word knifed; also the explanatory words, argument boat fare, and the word mate. Cappy Ricks Or, the Subjugation of Matt Peasley
- They loved his humour, his way of pronouncing foreign names, his indomitable courage. The Search for Justice - a history of Britain and the British people Volume III
- Either way, he omitted to mention that he had snapped from the back of the set the post that connects to the cable box.
- Der Oberste oder Generalfeltmesser Surveyor general und der oberst Einzieher Receyvers general welche grad zur selbigen Zeit, wegen ihren Geschäften zu Londen sich befunden, und von dem Königlichen Comite so wohl als von den Lords propr. Christoph von Graffenried's Account of the Founding of New Bern. Edited with an Historical Introduction and an English Translation by Vincent H. Todd, Ph.D. University of Illinois in Cooperation with Julius Goebel, Ph.D., Professor of Germanic Languag