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  1. Dictionary
    void
    /void/

    adjective

    noun

    • 1. a completely empty space: "the black void of space"
    • 2. (in bridge and whist) a suit in which a player is dealt no cards: "a hand with a singleton club is more likely than one with a void"

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. void: [adjective] of no legal force or effect : null. voidable.

  3. VOID definition: 1. a large hole or empty space: 2. a feeling of unhappiness because someone or something is…. Learn more.

  4. Void definition: having no legal force or effect; not legally binding or enforceable.. See examples of VOID used in a sentence.

  5. VOID meaning: 1. a large hole or empty space: 2. a feeling of unhappiness because someone or something is…. Learn more.

  6. void: 1 n an empty area or space “the huge desert voids ” Synonyms: emptiness , vacancy , vacuum Type of: space an empty area (usually bounded in some way between things) n the state of nonexistence Synonyms: nihility , nothingness , nullity Types: thin air nowhere to be found in a giant void Type of: nonentity , nonexistence the state of not ...

  7. 15 meanings: 1. without contents; empty 2. not legally binding 3. (of an office, house, position, etc) without an incumbent;.... Click for more definitions.

  8. 4. To make void or of no validity; invalidate: issued a new passport and voided the old one.

  9. The void left by his mother's death was never filled. It seemed that nothing could fill the aching black void left by Rachel’s death. Word Origin Middle English (in the sense ‘unoccupied’): from a dialect variant of Old French vuide; related to Latin vacare ‘vacate’; the verb partly a shortening of avoid, reinforced by Old French voider.

  10. Void definition: Not occupied; unfilled. Origin of Void Middle English from Old French voide feminine of voit from Vulgar Latin vocitus alteration of Latin vacīvus, vocīvus variant of vacuus from vacāre to be empty euə-in Indo-European roots . From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition From Old French vuit, voide (modern vide).

  11. Definitions on the go. Look up any word in the dictionary offline, anytime, anywhere with the Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary app. (law) (of a contract, an agreement etc.) not correct or legally valid. ... The contract was declared null and void. They declared the agreement null and void.

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