"Expurgating" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Expurgating refers to the act of removing or censoring offensive or objectionable parts from a text, work of art, or other forms of expression, often in order to make it more suitable for public consumption or to conform to societal norms or standards.
Expunction refers to the process of officially erasing or wiping out a past mistake or record, typically a criminal conviction or a debit from a person's credit report.
To expunge means to formally remove or obliterate something, typically an error, mistake, or offense, from a record or official document. This can include actions such as erasing a criminal conviction from a person's record, deleting a mistake from a database, or canceling a debt. The term also implies a sense of erasure or elimination, as if the thing being expunged never existed in the first place.
To expunge means to officially remove or erase a record, especially of a crime or mistake, from a person's file or database, as if it never happened.
Expunging refers to the act of officially erasing or removing a record or conviction from one's criminal record or personal file, often to clear a person's name or prevent future discrimination or stigma.
To expurgate something means to remove or to censor offensive, obscene, or sensitive content from it, often to make it more acceptable or suitable for a wider audience. This can refer to books, documents, speeches, or other written or spoken materials.
Expurgated refers to something that has had offensive or obscene parts removed, usually for moral or legal reasons. It can also describe text or content that has been censored or edited to make it more acceptable or suitable for a wider audience.
Expurgation refers to the act of deleting or excising certain parts of a text, often to remove offensive, undesirable, or inappropriate material, such as obscenity, blasphemy, or ideologically unacceptable content.
An expurgator is someone or something that removes or deletes personal or sensitive information from texts, documents, or publications, often for ethical, legal, or moral reasons. This can include obscenities, vulgarity, or other inoffensive content. An expurgator may also refer to a person who reviews and removes objectionable material from a text, or a process of reviewing and censoring text for publication.
Expurgatorial refers to the act or process of expurgating, which means to censor or remove offensive orobjectionable material, especially in a literary or artistic work, to make it more acceptable or suitable for a wider audience.
Expurgatorious refers to something that is cleansed or purged of offensive or indecent material, often in a diligent or scrupulous manner.
Expurgatory refers to something that is intended to correct or remove impurities, mistakes, or offensive content, often in a written work, such as a book or text. An expurgatory version of a text may be a revised or censored version that has had offensive or unacceptable content removed or altered. The term can also be used to describe a process of scrutiny or examination intended to identify and eliminate impurities or errors.
To expurge means to remove or reject something, especially a person or idea, from a place or community, usually because it is considered unwanted or unpopular.
Exquisite refers to something that is extremely beautiful, delicate, or refined. It can describe a work of art, a piece of jewelry, a natural phenomenon, or even a person's physical appearance. The term often connotes a sense of precision, craftsmanship, or attention to detail that sets the subject apart from others.