wipe out

verbs

use up (resources or materials)
"this car consumes a lot of gas"; "We exhausted our savings"; "They run through 20 bottles of wine a week"
kill in large numbers
"the plague wiped out an entire population"
is derived from
eliminate completely and without a trace
"The old values have been wiped out"
is derived from
remove from memory or existence
"The Turks erased the Armenians in 1915"
is derived from
mark for deletion, rub off, or erase
"kill these lines in the President's speech"
is derived from
wipe out the effect of something
"The new tax effectively cancels out my raise"; "The `A' will cancel out the `C' on your record"
is derived from