memory hole

Etymology
From. (“figurative place to which information is deliberately sent to be forgotten, or to which forgotten or lost information ends up”) is a transferred use of the physical slots which (1903–1950) refers to in his novel  (1949), into which censored documents for destruction are dropped.

Noun

 * 1)  A figurative place to which information is deliberately sent to be forgotten, or to which forgotten or lost information ends up; nowhere, oblivion.
 * 2) A fragment of physical address space which does not map to main memory.
 * 1) A fragment of physical address space which does not map to main memory.
 * 1) A fragment of physical address space which does not map to main memory.
 * 1) A fragment of physical address space which does not map to main memory.
 * 1) A fragment of physical address space which does not map to main memory.
 * 1) A fragment of physical address space which does not map to main memory.
 * 1) A fragment of physical address space which does not map to main memory.
 * 1) A fragment of physical address space which does not map to main memory.
 * 1) A fragment of physical address space which does not map to main memory.

Translations

 * Arabic: ثقب الذاكرة
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 思舊穴, 忘懷洞
 * Finnish:, muistiaukko
 * German: Erinnerungsloch, Gedächtnisloch
 * Italian: buco della memoria
 * Macedonian:
 * Portuguese: buraco da memória
 * Turkish: hafıza deliği


 * Finnish: tyhjä osoitealue
 * Macedonian: