Obliteration in a sentence as a noun

\n Fear is the little-death that brings\n total obliteration.

Please excuse my bluntness; a person's obliteration is something I'd prefer not to swathe in soft euphemisms.

What things do you add up, or forget to add up, to come to that conclusion?The control is complete, as is the obliteration of your infrastructure and/or your\ndata.

The goal of the Pakistani government seems to be the complete obliteration of all private communications.

If this passes and Hamas still does not revise their charter, calling for the "obliteration of Israel", what will Israel be able to negotiate with in exchange for peace?

The trading algorithms will know about the earthquake within seconds, and they will also know about likely know about Google's obliteration from speech-to-text of police scanners.

Please understand that acting on those desires will result in the harming and potential destruction of your children and the utter obliteration of your parent/child relationship.

Interesting to note that Orwell railed against tyranny, control of the understrength masses by a powerful few, and the obliteration of individualism and C. S. Lewis wrote thinly-disguised Christian propaganda targeted towards children.

Does that disagreement really justify the complete obliteration of the person's privacy?I keep posting about this on HN and people keep ignoring it, but this is just another example of the rapid deterioration of civil society.

The independence and progress of local universities was always to the benefit of local rulers and at the same time the universities enjoyed an association with the church that helped protect them from both obliteration after military conquest and excessive domination by the state.

Even when the entire Mediterranean Bronze age civilization collapsed catastrophically with people starving to death, cities burning, widespread brutal and chaotic warfare, and obliteration of conventional social structures the civilizations still bounced back in a few centuries, sometimes in less than a single century.

Her neighbors may express as fervently as they desire the wish to "push Israel into the sea"; knowing, as they do, that the obliteration of their capitals would follow instantly upon the commencement of any attempt to make good on their threats, they are content to let mere words remain mere words, and thus does Israel in large part accomplish "the avoidance of violence".

Obliteration definitions

noun

destruction by annihilating something

See also: annihilation

noun

the complete destruction of every trace of something

See also: eradication