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void
[ void ]
adjective
- Law. having no legal force or effect; not legally binding or enforceable.
- devoid; destitute (usually followed by of ):
a life void of meaning.
- without contents; empty.
- without an incumbent, as an office.
Synonyms: ,
- Mathematics. (of a set) containing no elements; empty.
- (in cards) having no cards in a suit.
noun
- an empty space; emptiness:
He disappeared into the void.
Synonyms: , ,
- something experienced as a loss or privation:
His death left a great void in her life.
- a gap or opening, as in a wall.
- Typography. counter 3( def 10 ).
- (in cards) lack of cards in a suit:
a void in clubs.
verb (used with object)
- to make ineffectual; invalidate; nullify:
to void a check.
to void excrement.
- to clear or empty (often followed by of ):
to void a chamber of occupants.
- Archaic. to depart from; vacate.
verb (used without object)
- to defecate or urinate.
void
/ ɔɪ /
adjective
- without contents; empty
- not legally binding
null and void
- (of an office, house, position, etc) without an incumbent; unoccupied
- postpositivefoll byof destitute or devoid
void of resources
- having no effect; useless
all his efforts were rendered void
- (of a card suit or player) having no cards in a particular suit
his spades were void
noun
- an empty space or area
the huge desert voids of Asia
- a feeling or condition of loneliness or deprivation
his divorce left him in a void
- a lack of any cards in one suit
to have a void in spades
- Also calledcounter the inside area of a character of type, such as the inside of an o
verb
- to make ineffective or invalid
- to empty (contents, etc) or make empty of contents
- also intr to discharge the contents of (the bowels or urinary bladder)
- archaic.to vacate (a place, room, etc)
- obsolete.to expel
Derived Forms
- ˈǾԱ, noun
- ˈǾ, noun
Other Word Forms
- Ǿn noun
- ԴDz·Ǿ adjective noun
- ·Ǿ verb (used with object)
- ܲ·Ǿ adjective
- un·Ǿn noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of void1
Word History and Origins
Origin of void1
Idioms and Phrases
see null and void .Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Sitting in his reception room in the Vatican, Archbishop Gallagher said even he had been stunned by the magnitude of the void he feels has been left by the Pope's death.
It's fair to say he leaves a sizeable void at right-back.
Not only did Sparks want Barker to round out their revamped roster, but they also needed her to fill a void in their rotation.
Black-and-white drawings dominate the show’s first half, in which closely observed, acutely detailed faces emerge out of the blank void of colorless sheets of paper.
District Court for the Northern District of California to void Trump’s tariff orders, according to Bonta’s office.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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