without trace
1sink without trace — 1) to disappear or fail completely After one hit record, the band sank without trace. 2) if a boat sinks without trace, it sinks and cannot be found …
2sink without trace — to be forgotten about completely, after being popular for a while. They enjoyed brief success with their second album and then sank without trace …
3trace — [[t]tre͟ɪs[/t]] ♦♦♦ traces, tracing, traced 1) VERB If you trace the origin or development of something, you find out or describe how it started or developed. [V n] The exhibition traces the history of graphic design in America from the 19th… …
4trace — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 mark/sign that shows sb/sth happened/existed ADJECTIVE ▪ archaeological, historical ▪ indelible, permanent ▪ memory (technical) VERB + TRACE …
5trace — 1 verb (T) 1 FIND SB/STH to find someone or something that has disappeared by searching for them carefully: She had given up all hope of tracing her missing daughter. 2 ORIGINS to find the origins of something, or where something came from: trace …
6trace — trace1 [ treıs ] verb transitive ** 1. ) to find someone or something that you are looking for by asking questions and getting information: Detectives have so far failed to trace the missing woman. trace someone to something: They finally traced… …
7trace */*/ — I UK [treɪs] / US verb [transitive] Word forms trace : present tense I/you/we/they trace he/she/it traces present participle tracing past tense traced past participle traced 1) a) to find someone or something that you are looking for by asking… …
8Without a Trace (season 6) — Without A Trace Season 6 Season 6, region 2 DVD cover Country of origin …
9Without a Trace (disambiguation) — Without a Trace may refer to: * Without a Trace (Hardy Boys novel) , a Hardy Boys Casefiles novel * Without a Trace (Nancy Drew novel), a novel * Without a Trace (film) , a 1983 drama film starring Kate Nelligan and Judd Hirsch * Without a Trace… …
10Trace (deconstruction) — Trace is one of the most important concepts in Derridian Deconstruction. In the 1960s, Derrida used this word in two of his early books, namely “Writing and Difference” and “Of Grammatology”. The English word “trace” was first used by Gayatri… …