What is the meaning of OMISS. Phrases containing OMISS
See meanings and uses of OMISS!OMISS
OMISS
NASA
Operation And Maintenance Instruction Summary Sheet(s)
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Acronyms & AI meanings
Automatic Telephone System
Rapperswil School of Engineering
Chaguanas Borough Corporation
Association of Energy and Environment
: Absolutely not
Universal Kart Hizmetleri
Comic of the Week
Quakean Peoples Front
Associazione Nazionale Istruttori Subacquei
: Destination Rail Station
OMISS
OMISS
Neglect or omission to use an easement or franchise or to assert a right.
OMISS
subj. 3d pers. sing.
Let it stand; -- a word used by proof readers to signify that something once erased, or marked for omission, is to remain.
n.
Omission; as, the suppression of a word.
a.
Leaving out; omitting.
n.
A failure to attend; omission of attendance; nonappearance.
n.
That which is omitted or is left undone.
n.
The act of omitting; neglect or failure to do something required by propriety or duty.
prep.
Not with; otherwise than with; in absence of, separation from, or destitution of; not with use or employment of; independently of; exclusively of; with omission; as, without labor; without damage.
n.
The act of passing over an interval from one thing to another; an omission of a part.
n.
The quality or state of being negligent; lack of due diligence or care; omission of duty; habitual neglect; heedlessness.
n.
A failure to make claim within the time limited by law; omission of claim.
n.
An omission or neglect to do something, esp. that which ought to have been done. Cf. Malfeasance.
a.
Capable of being omitted; that may be omitted.
n.
The omission of the care usual under the circumstances, being convertible with the Roman culpa. A specialist is bound to higher skill and diligence in his specialty than one who is not a specialist, and liability for negligence varies acordingly.
n.
The showing an omission, as in an account, for which credit ought to have been given.
n.
The omission of some person who ought to have been made a plaintiff or defendant in a suit, or of some cause of action which ought to be joined.
v. t.
To show an omission in (an account) for which credit ought to have been given.
n.
Transgression of the law of God; disobedience of the divine command; any violation of God's will, either in purpose or conduct; moral deficiency in the character; iniquity; as, sins of omission and sins of commission.
n.
A neglect or failure of delivery; omission of delivery.
v. t.
To cause or direct to remain after having been marked for omission; to mark with the word stet, or with a series of dots below or beside the matter; as, the proof reader stetted a deled footnote.
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