adj. 1. Containing no matter; empty. 2. Not occupied; unfilled. 4. Ineffective; useless. 5. Having no legal force or validity; null: a contract rendered void. 6. Games Lacking cards of a particular suit in a dealt hand. n. 1. a. An empty space. b. A vacuum. 2. An open space or a break in continuity; a gap. 3. A feeling or state of emptiness, loneliness, or loss. 4. Games Absence of cards of a particular suit in a dealt hand: a void in hearts. v. void·ed, void·ing, voids v.tr. 1. To take out (the contents of something); empty. 2. To excrete (body wastes). 3. To leave; vacate. 4. To make void or of no validity; invalidate: issued a new passport and voided the old one. v.intr. To excrete body wastes. [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; see euə- in the Appendix of Indo-European roots.] voider n. |
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