Advertise - Dictionary - Resources - Links
define words at indictionary.com
Please use the form below to search our dictionaries by entering a word you wish to define. (If you search this site to define words regularly, support this FREE site - Donate! )
Define Word:
Use dictionary:
 

Or browse by Letter:
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M
N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z




Define the word Vacancy

"Vacancy" gcide "The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48"
Vacancy \Va"can*cy\, n.; pl. Vacancies. [Cf. F. vacance.]
   [1913 Webster]
   1. The quality or state of being vacant; emptiness; hence,
      freedom from employment; intermission; leisure; idleness;
      listlessness.
      [1913 Webster]

            All dispositions to idleness or vacancy, even before
            they are habits, are dangerous.       --Sir H.
                                                  Wotton.
      [1913 Webster]

   2. That which is vacant. Specifically: 
      [1913 Webster]
      (a) Empty space; vacuity; vacuum.
          [1913 Webster]

                How is't with you,
                That you do bend your eye on vacancy? --Shak.
          [1913 Webster]
      (b) An open or unoccupied space between bodies or things;
          an interruption of continuity; chasm; gap; as, a
          vacancy between buildings; a vacancy between sentences
          or thoughts.
          [1913 Webster]
      (c) Unemployed time; interval of leisure; time of
          intermission; vacation.
          [1913 Webster]

                Time lost partly in too oft idle vacancies given
                both to schools and universities. --Milton.
          [1913 Webster]

                No interim, not a minute's vacancy. --Shak.
          [1913 Webster]

                Those little vacancies from toil are sweet.
                                                  --Dryden.
          [1913 Webster]
      (d) A place or post unfilled; an unoccupied office; as, a
          vacancy in the senate, in a school, etc.
          [1913 Webster]
"vacancy" wn "WordNet (r) 2.0"
vacancy
     n 1: being unoccupied
     2: an empty area or space; "the huge desert voids"; "the
        emptiness of outer space"; "without their support he'll be
        ruling in a vacuum" [syn: void, emptiness, vacuum]
"vacancy" moby-thes "Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0"
88 Moby Thesaurus words for "vacancy":
   absence, absence of mind, appointment, bareness, barrenness, berth,
   billet, blank, blank mind, blankmindedness, blankness, bleakness,
   breach, calm of mind, deficiency, deprivation, desertedness,
   desolateness, employment, emptiness, emptiness of mind,
   empty-headedness, engagement, fallow mind, fatuity, foolishness,
   gap, gig, hiatus, hollowness, inanition, inanity, incomprehension,
   incumbency, jejunity, job, lacuna, mental blankness, mental void,
   moonlighting, negation, negativeness, negativity, nihility,
   nirvana, nonbeing, nonentity, nonexistence, noninhabitance,
   nonoccupance, nonoccupancy, nonoccurrence, nonreality,
   nonresidence, nonsubsistence, not-being, nothingness, nullity,
   oblivion, office, opening, passivity, place, place open, position,
   post, quietism, second job, service, situation, slot, station,
   tabula rasa, tenure, thoughtfreeness, thoughtlessness,
   tranquillity, unactuality, unawareness, unintelligence, unreality,
   vacant post, vacuity, vacuousness, vacuum, vapidity, void,
   voidness



"VACANCY" bouvier "Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)"
VACANCY. A place which is empty. The term is principally applied to cases 
where an office is not filled. 
     2. By the constitution of the United States, the president has the 
power to fill up vacancies that may happen during the recess of the senate. 
Whether the president can create an office and fill it during the recess of 
the senate, seems to have been much questioned. Story, Const. Sec. 1553. See 
Serg. Const. Law, ch. 31; 1 Breese, R. 70. 




Define words free with indictionary.com - Please support this site

Dictionary - Resources - Links

Net Dict by Dennis Bech Iversen. Database powerd by Dict.Org.  - Powered by Thoughtfulmedia - © Copyright Indictionary