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  1. Dictionary
    E·lapse
    /əˈlaps/

    verb

    • 1. (of time) pass or go by: "weeks elapsed before anyone was charged with the attack"
  2. The meaning of ELAPSE is pass, go by. How to use elapse in a sentence.

  3. (of time) to go past: Four years had elapsed since she last saw him. (Definition of elapse from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Examples of elapse.

  4. (of time) to go past: Four years had elapsed since she last saw him. (Definition of elapse from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Examples of elapse.

  5. /ɪˈlæps/ IPA guide. Other forms: elapsed; elapses; elapsing. When time passes by, you say it elapses. Four years elapse while you are in high school. Nine months elapse while you are in the womb. If two weeks have elapsed between your tennis lessons, there has been a two-week lapse between sessions.

  6. Elapse definition: (of time) to slip or pass by. See examples of ELAPSE used in a sentence.

  7. Define elapse. elapse synonyms, elapse pronunciation, elapse translation, English dictionary definition of elapse. the passage or termination of a period of time: Eight hours have elapsed since we ate.

  8. Definition of elapse verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. elapse. (ɪlæps ) Word forms: 3rd person singular present tense elapses , present participle elapsing , past tense, past participle elapsed. verb. When time elapses, it passes. [formal] Forty-eight hours have elapsed since his arrest. [VERB] Synonyms: pass, go, go by, lapse More Synonyms of elapse.

  10. Jun 4, 2024 · elapse (third-person singular simple present elapses, present participle elapsing, simple past and past participle elapsed) ( intransitive, of time) To pass or move by . He allowed a month to elapse before beginning the work. Several days elapsed before they met again.

  11. If time elapses, it passes: Two years have elapsed since the attack. (Definition of elapse from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)