erode

[ ih-rohd ]
/ ɪˈroʊd /

verb (used with object), e·rod·ed, e·rod·ing.

to eat into or away; destroy by slow consumption or disintegration: Battery acid had eroded the engine. Inflation erodes the value of our money.
to form (a gully, butte, or the like) by erosion.

verb (used without object), e·rod·ed, e·rod·ing.

to become eroded.

Origin of erode

1605–15; < Latin ērōdere, equivalent to ē- e-1 + rōdere to gnaw

OTHER WORDS FROM erode

Example sentences from the Web for erode

British Dictionary definitions for erode

erode
/ (ɪˈrəʊd) /

verb

to grind or wear down or away or become ground or worn down or away
to deteriorate or cause to deteriorate jealousy eroded the relationship
(tr; usually passive) pathol to remove (tissue) by ulceration

Derived forms of erode

erodent, adjective, noun erodible, adjective

Word Origin for erode

C17: from Latin ērōdere, from ex- 1 + rōdere to gnaw

Medical definitions for erode

erode
[ ĭ-rōd ]

v.

To wear away by or as if by abrasion.
To eat into; ulcerate.