0 to do someone else's work for them because they cannot or will not do it themselves: --
She will fill in for him while he's at the conference.
1 to do someone else’s job temporarily: --
The gym teacher was sick today, so a substitute filled in for her.
2 to write or type information on a document in spaces that are provided for it: --
4 to tell someone something they do not know, especially something that happened when they were not there: --
5 a person who does a job for a short period of time, for example, for someone who is ill --
The questionnaire had various options and a fill-in 'other ' category.
In this case, it is considered as lag fill-in of tidal channels in intertidal domains.
The persistence of the error pattern continues to be attributable to underspecified representations and the fill-in rules.
However, new information has been obtained for each of these four points, some opening promising ways to fill-in the missing data.
The default fill-in rule fails to apply in coda position, and the placeless nasal is realised as [] by the phonetic component.
While sophisticated re-ordering strategies, such as nested dissection, exist that try to minimise fill-in, its occurrence cannot be completely avoided.
The same upper bound applies to edge elimination if we ensure that no edge is eliminated and reintroduced repeatedly through fill-in.
The further imposition of the fill-in property has important conceptual and mathematical consequences.