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English-Thai Dictionary

void

ADJ ที่ เป็น โมฆะ  ที่ ไม่มีผล ทางกฎหมาย  null ti-pen-mo-ka

 

void

ADJ ที่ ไม่ มีประโยชน์  useless ineffective useful ti-mai-me-pra-yod

 

void

ADJ ที่ ไม่มี สิ่งใด  ที่ ปราศจาก สิ่งใด  ที่ว่างเปล่า  null empty devoid empty ti-mai-me-sing-dai

 

void

N ความว่างเปล่า  nullity unfilled kwam-wang-pao

 

void

N ช่องว่าง  blank chong-wang

 

void

N สิ่ง ที่ เป็น ประสบการณ์  เช่น  ความสูญเสีย  sing-ti-pen-pa-sob-kan-chen-kwam-suan-sia

 

void

VI ถ่ายอุจจาระ หรือ ปัสสาวะ  tai-u-ja-ra-rue-pad-sa-wa

 

void

VT ทำให้ เป็น โมฆะ  invalidate tam-hai-mo-ka

 

voidable

ADJ ซึ่ง ทำให้ โมฆะ ได้  ซึ่ง ทำให้ ไม่ได้ผล  ซึ่ง เพิกถอน ได้  sueng-tam-hai-mo-ka-dai

 

voidableness

N การ ทำให้ เป็น โมฆะ  kan-tam-hai-pen-mo-ka

 

voidance

N การ ถือเป็น โมฆะ  การ ไม่มีผล ทางกฎหมาย  การเพิกถอน  kan-tue-pen-mo-ka

 

voided

ADJ โมฆะ  ไม่ได้ผล  เพิกถอน  ยกเลิก  mo-ka

 

voider

N ผู้ทำ ให้ เป็น โมฆะ  phu-tam-hai-mo-ka

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

VOID

a.[L. viduus, divido. Gr. ] 1. Empty; vacant; not occupied with any visible matter; as a void space or place. 1 Kings 22:1 .
2. Empty; without inhabitants or furniture. Genesis 1:2.
3. Having no legal or binding force; null; not effectual to bind parties, or to convey or support a right; not sufficient to produce its effect. Thus a deed not duly signed and sealed, is void. A fraudulent contract is void, or may be rendered void.
My word shall not return to me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please. Isaiah 55:11.
I will make void the counsel of Judah and Jerusalem in this place. Jeremiah 19:7.
4. Free; clear; as a conscience void of offense. Acts 24:16.
5. Destitute; as void of learning; void of reason or common sense.
He that is void of wisdom, despiseth his neighbor. Proverbs 11:12.
6. Unsupplied; vacant; unoccupied; having no incumbent.
Divers offices that had been long void.
7. Unsubstantial; vain.
Lifeless idol, void and vain.
Void space, in physics, a vacuum.
1. To make void; to violate; to transgress.
They have made void thy law. Psalm 119:126.
2. To render useless or of no effect. Romans 4:14.

 

VOID

n.An empty space; a vacuum. Pride, where wit falls, steps in to our defense, and fills up all the mighty void of sense.
Th' illimitable void.

 

VOID

v.t. 1. To quit; to leave.
Bid them come down, or void the field.
2. To emit; to send out; to evacuate; as, to void excrementitious matter; to void worms.
3. To vacate; to annul; to nullify; to render of no validity or effect.
It had become a practice - to void the security given for money borrowed.
4. To make or leave vacant.

 

VOID

v.i.To be emitted or evacuated.

 

VOIDABLE

a.That may be annulled or made void, or that may be adjudged void, invalid or of no force. - Such administration is not void, but voidable by sentence.

 

VOIDANCE

n. 1. The act of emptying.
2. The act of ejecting from a benefice; ejection.
3. Vacancy; want of an incumbent.
4. Evasion; subterfuge.

 

VOIDED

pp. 1. Thrust out; evacuated.
2. a. In heraldry, having the inner or middle part cut out, as an ordinary.

 

VOIDER

n. 1. A basket in which broken meat is carried from the table.
2. One who evacuates.
3. One who nullifies.
4. In heraldry, one of the ordinaries, whose figure is much like that of the flanch or flasque.
5. In agriculture, a provincial name of a kind of shallow basket of open work.

 

VOIDING

ppr. 1. Ejecting; evacuating.
2. Making or declaring void, or of no force.
3. Quitting; leaving.
4. a. Receiving what is ejected; as a voiding lobby.

 

VOIDNESS

n. 1. Emptiness; vacuity; destitution.
2. Nullify; inefficacy; want of binding force.
3. Want of substantiality.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

VOID

Void, a. Etym: [OE. voide, OF. voit, voide, vuit, vuide, F. vide, fr. (assumed ) LL. vocitus, fr. L. vocare, an old form of vacare to be empty, or a kindred word. Cf. Vacant, Avoid. ]

 

1. Containing nothing; empty; vacant; not occupied; not filled. The earth was without form, and void. Gen. i. 2. I 'll get me to a place more void. Shak. I 'll chain him in my study, that, at void hours, I may run over the story of his country. Massinger.

 

2. Having no incumbent; unoccupied; -- said of offices and the like. Divers great offices that had been long void. Camden.

 

3. Being without; destitute; free; wanting; devoid; as, void of learning, or of common use. Milton. A conscience void of offense toward God. Acts xxiv. 16. He that is void of wisdom despiseth his neighbor. Prov. xi. 12.

 

4. Not producing any effect; ineffectual; vain. [My word ] shall not return to me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please. Isa. lv. 11. I will make void the counsel of Judah. Jer. xix. 7.

 

5. Containing no immaterial quality; destitute of mind or soul. "Idol, void and vain. " Pope.

 

6. (Law )

 

Defn: Of no legal force or effect, incapable of confirmation or ratification; null. Cf. Voidable, 2. Void space (Physics ), a vacuum.

 

Syn. -- Empty; vacant; devoid; wanting; unfurnished; unsupplied; unoccupied.

 

VOID

VOID Void, n.

 

Defn: An empty space; a vacuum. Pride, where wit fails, steps in to our defense, And fills up all the mighty void of sense. Pope.

 

VOID

Void, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Voided; p. pr. & vb. n. Voiding. ] Etym: [OF. voidier, vuidier. See Void, a.]

 

1. To remove the contents of; to make or leave vacant or empty; to quit; to leave; as, to void a table. Void anon her place. Chaucer. If they will fight with us, bid them come down, Or void the field. Shak.

 

2. To throw or send out; to evacuate; to emit; to discharge; as, to void excrements. A watchful application of mind in voiding prejudices. Barrow. With shovel, like a fury, voided out The earth and scattered bones.J. Webster.

 

3. To render void; to make to be of no validity or effect; to vacate; to annul; to nullify. After they had voided the obligation of the oath he had taken. Bp. Burnet. It was become a practice. .. to void the security that was at any time given for money so borrowed. Clarendon.

 

VOID

VOID Void, v. i.

 

Defn: To be emitted or evacuated. Wiseman.

 

VOIDABLE

VOIDABLE Void "a *ble, a.

 

1. Capable of being voided, or evacuated.

 

2. (Law )

 

Defn: Capable of being avoided, or of being adjudged void, invalid, and of no force; capable of being either avoided or confirmed. If the metropolitan. .. grants letters of administration, such administration is not, but voidable by sentence. Ayliffe.

 

Note: A voidable contract may be ratified and confirmed; to render it null and of no effect, it must be avoided; a void contract can not be ratified.

 

VOIDANCE

VOIDANCE Void "ance, n.

 

1. The act of voiding, emptying, ejecting, or evacuating.

 

2. (Eccl.)

 

Defn: A ejection from a benefice.

 

3. The state of being void; vacancy, as of a benefice which is without an incumbent.

 

4. Evasion; subterfuge. [Obs. ] Bacon.

 

VOIDED

VOIDED Void "ed, a.

 

1. Emptied; evacuated.

 

2. Annulled; invalidated.

 

3. (Her. )

 

Defn: Having the inner part cut away, or left vacant, a narrow border being left at the sides, the tincture of the field being seen in the vacant space; -- said of a charge.

 

VOIDER

VOIDER Void "er, n.

 

1. One who, or that which, voids,

 

2. A tray, or basket, formerly used to receive or convey that which is voided or cleared away from a given place; especially, one for carrying off the remains of a meal, as fragments of food; sometimes, a basket for containing household articles, as clothes, etc. Piers Plowman laid the cloth, and Simplicity brought in the voider. Decker. The cloth whereon the earl dined was taken away, and the voider, wherein the plate was usually put, was set upon the cupboard's head. Hist. of Richard Hainam.

 

3. A servant whose business is to void, or clear away, a table after a meal. [R.] Decker.

 

4. (Her. )

 

Defn: One of the ordinaries, much like the flanch, but less rounded and therefore smaller.

 

VOIDING

VOIDING Void "ing, n.

 

1. The act of one who, or that which, v Bp. Hall.

 

2. That which is voided; that which is ejected or evacuated; a remnant; a fragment. [R.] Rowe. Voiding knife, a knife used for gathering up fragments of food to put them into a voider.

 

VOIDING

VOIDING Void "ing, a.

 

Defn: Receiving what is ejected or voided. "How in our voiding lobby hast thou stood " Shak.

 

VOIDNESS

VOIDNESS Void "ness, n.

 

Defn: The quality or state of being void;

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

void

void |void vɔɪd | adjective 1 not valid or legally binding: the contract was void. (of speech or action ) ineffectual; useless: all the stratagems you've worked out are rendered void. 2 completely empty: void spaces surround the tanks. [ predic. ] (void of ) free from; lacking: what were once the masterpieces of literature are now void of meaning. formal (of an office or position ) vacant. 3 [ predic. ] (in bridge and whist ) having been dealt no cards in a particular suit. noun 1 a completely empty space: the black void of space. an emptiness caused by the loss of something: the void left by the death of his wife. an unfilled space in a wall, building, or structure. 2 (in bridge and whist ) a suit in which a player is dealt no cards. verb [ with obj. ] 1 declare that (something ) is not valid or legally binding: the Supreme Court voided the statute. 2 discharge or drain away (water, gases, etc. ). chiefly Medicine excrete (waste matter ). (usu. as adj. voided ) empty or evacuate (a container or space ). DERIVATIVES void a ble adjective, void ness noun 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 .

 

voidance

void ance |ˈvoidns ˈvɔɪdəns | noun the action of voiding something or the state of being voided: the voidance of exhaust gases. chiefly Law an annulment of a contract. Christian Church a vacancy in a benefice. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French, from the verb voider (see void ).

 

void deck

void deck noun SE Asian the ground floor of a block of flats, which is left vacant and typically used for communal activities.

 

voided

void ed |ˈvoidid ˈvɔɪdɪd | adjective Heraldry (of a bearing ) having the central area cut away so as to show the field.

 

Oxford Dictionary

void

void |vɔɪd | adjective 1 not valid or legally binding: the contract was void. (of speech or action ) ineffectual; useless: all the stratagems you've worked out are rendered void. 2 completely empty: void spaces surround the tanks. (void of ) free from; lacking: what were once the masterpieces of literature are now void of meaning. formal (of an office or position ) vacant. 3 [ predic. ] (in bridge and whist ) having been dealt no cards in a particular suit. noun 1 a completely empty space: the black void of space. an unfilled space in a wall, building, or other structure. an emptiness caused by the loss of something: his loss leaves a void in the community. 2 (in bridge and whist ) a suit in which a player is dealt no cards. verb [ with obj. ] 1 chiefly N. Amer. declare that (something ) is not valid or legally binding: the Supreme court voided the statute. 2 discharge or drain away (water, gases, etc. ). chiefly Medicine excrete (waste matter ). (usu. as adj. voided ) empty or evacuate (a container or space ). 3 (as adj. voided ) Heraldry (of a bearing ) having the central area cut away so as to show the field. DERIVATIVES voidable adjective, voidness noun 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 .

 

voidance

void |ance |ˈvɔɪd (ə )ns | noun 1 [ mass noun ] the action of voiding or the state of being voided: the voidance of exhaust gases. 2 chiefly Law an annulment of a contract. 3 Christian Church a vacancy in a benefice. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French, from the verb voider (see void ).

 

void deck

void deck noun SE Asian the ground floor of a block of flats, which is left vacant and typically used for communal activities.

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

void

void noun the void of space: vacuum, emptiness, nothingness, nullity, blankness, vacuity; empty space, blank space, space, gap, cavity, chasm, abyss, gulf, pit, black hole. verb the contract was voided: invalidate, annul, nullify; negate, quash, cancel, countermand, repeal, revoke, rescind, retract, withdraw, reverse, undo, abolish; Law vacate; formal abrogate. ANTONYMS validate. adjective 1 vast void spaces: empty, vacant, blank, bare, clear, free, unfilled, unoccupied, uninhabited. ANTONYMS full. 2 a country void of man or beast: devoid of, empty of, vacant of, bereft of, free from; lacking, wanting, without, with nary a. ANTONYMS occupied. 3 the election was void: invalid, null, ineffective, nonviable, useless, worthless, nugatory. ANTONYMS valid.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

void

void noun the black void of space: gap, empty space, space, blank space, blank, vacuum, lacuna, hole, cavity, chasm, abyss, gulf, pit, hiatus; emptiness, nothingness, blankness, vacancy, vacuity, oblivion, nullity; rare voidness, nihility. verb 1 the contract was voided: invalidate, render invalid, annul, nullify; negate, disallow, quash, cancel, countermand, repeal, revoke, rescind, retract, withdraw, reverse, abrogate, undo, abolish, obliterate, terminate, repudiate; Law avoid, vacate. ANTONYMS validate, ratify. 2 the patients had difficulty in voiding their bladders: evacuate, empty, empty out, drain, clear, unload, unburden, purge. ANTONYMS fill. 3 the bacteria are present in the kidneys of the rat and are voided in the urine: eject, expel, emit, discharge, pass, excrete, egest, let out, send out, release, exude, eliminate; rare disembogue. ANTONYMS take in. adjective 1 the cathedral has vast void spaces: empty, emptied, vacant, without contents, containing nothing, blank, bare, clear, free, unfilled, unoccupied, uninhabited, desolate, barren. ANTONYMS full. 2 a populous country suddenly left void of man or beast: devoid of, empty of, vacant of, bare of, destitute of, bereft of, denuded of, deficient in, free from; lacking, wanting, without. ANTONYMS occupied. 3 the election had been declared void: invalid, null and void, null, nullified, cancelled, revoked, rescinded, abolished, inoperative, ineffective, not binding, not in force, non-viable, useless, worthless, nugatory; lapsed, expired, out of date, terminated, discontinued, unrenewed. ANTONYMS valid.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

void

void /vɔɪd /〖原義は 形容詞 5 形容詞 比較なし 1 からの, 空虚な (empty )▸ a void space 何もない空間 .2 かたく 〘法 〙契約 約束などが 〉無効な (invalid 2 )If he didn't fill out his form, then it's null and void .もし彼がその用紙に必要事項を記入していなければ, それはまったく無効です .3 かたく 文 ⦆be «…が » 欠けた, ない (lacking ) «of » ▸ a speech void of emotion 感情の欠如したスピーチ .4 発言 行動が 〉効果のない, むだな (vain ).5 かたく 〈地位が 〉欠員になって (vacant ); 〈家 土地などが 〉(居住者がなくて )あいて fall void 欠員が生じる .6 be トランプ (ブリッジなどで ) «…の » 組札のない «in » .名詞 C かたく 1 the 空間, 虚空 (space ); 真空 ;⦅ 文 ⦆ (地球の周りの )宇宙空間 (space )disappear into the void 虚空に消える .2 〖通例単数形で 〗(心の中に感じる )空虚 , (大切な者 [物 ]を失った )喪失感, 空虚感 an aching void 苦しい心の空虚 [やるせなさ ]The death of a close friend leaves such a void in one's life .親友の死は人生にぽっかりと穴があいたような気分にさせる .3 (地位などの )欠員, あき fill the leadership void caused by the president's resignation 社長の辞任によって生じた指導者の穴を埋める .4 〖通例単数形で 〗空所 ; (壁などの )すきま, 穴, 割れ目 ;⦅ 比喩的に ⦆落とし穴 .5 トランプ 【ある組の 】札が手持ちにないこと «in » .動詞 他動詞 1 〘法 〙〈契約など 〉を無効にする ▸ a contract that may be voided 取り消し得べき契約 .2 中身 をあける, からにする;大便 小便 排泄 はいせつ する void the bladder 小便をする 〘膀胱 ぼうこう をからにする 〙自動詞 かたく 排泄する .