Eradication in a sentence as a noun

Hamas seeks the eradication of a state and its people; it is rightly shunned.

As a society we are pursuing both faster smartphones and eradication of diseases.

I don't think there is much to argue against: Vaccination and eradication of diseases has a more direct effect than access to broadband on health.

[0] As with all vaccines, it is imperfect, which is why coverage across the general population is the best approach to eradication or containment.

That's the difference!You may want to familiarize yourself with the history of smallpox eradication before continuing this debate.

If Rick Santorum becomes president, I think the eradication of porn from the Internet will be a quaint footnote compared to the other draconian things that'll come to pass.

Polio eradication is only one of many health initiatives funded by the Gates Foundation.

He has been involved in peace negotiations, election monitoring, and disease eradication [1].

Consider also that your statement is blatantly false: the oral polio vaccine developed in the 1950s remains in use today, and has successfully contributed to the eradication of polio in most of the world.

Just giving twenty dollars to everyone in Pakistan will make their own lives temporarily better, but spending twenty dollars per capita on Polio eradication will improve the lives of their children, and grandchildren, and so on until the end of time.

I might suggest a more accurate submission title for the article could be made out of the summary sentence in the abstract, "The presented data suggest that Tre-recombinase might become a valuable component of a future therapy that aims at virus eradication.

Eradication definitions

noun

the complete destruction of every trace of something

See also: obliteration