From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishomito‧mit /əʊˈmɪt, ə- $ oʊ-, ə-/ ●●○ verb (omitted, omitting) [transitive] 1 INCLUDEto not include someone or something, either deliberately or because you forget to do it SYN leave out Please don’t omit any details, no matter how trivial they may seem.omit something from something Lisa’s name had been omitted from the list of honor students.RegisterIn everyday English, people usually say leave out rather than omit:Please don’t leave out any details, no matter how trivial they may seem.2 → omit to do something→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
omit• It would have been better if they had been omitted.• Please do not omit any details, however trivial they may seem.• It marked the first time in a decade that the centers' annual request for injury-research proposals omitted firearms violence.• No doubt that story contained many scientific theories which she had had to omit from her tale, being unable to comprehend them.• Quady's name had been omitted from the list of honor students.• I committed or omitted, however you want to put it - it's all the same thing.• In his presentation of the theorem, Kelvin omitted many details.• Disappointingly, the exhibition omits Rauschenberg's portrait and still-life photography, which is richly illustrated in the catalogue.• But the fact that Johann Heinrich Silbermann omitted the check in his action remains intriguing.• Companies do sometimes give incorrect details or omit them altogether on their company stationery.Origin omit (1400-1500) Latin omittere