1 having no legal authority and therefore unacceptable: --
2 without; lacking in: --
He's completely void of charm as far as I can see.
3 to remove the legal force from something, such as a legal agreement --
4 a space with nothing in it: --
5 having no legal authority and therefore unacceptable: --
The meconium was voided 1-4 h after the onset of the prepupal stage, and pupation occurred shortly after.
The presence of water in excess of that required for chemical reaction creates minute voids, which propagate crazing and create visual defects.
With time, the sedimentary environment evolved and pelagic carbonate sediments were deposited either as interpillow voids and/or interbedded with the radiolarian cherts.
Unless they respond actively, they will be carried passively with the digesting gut contents along the intestine and eventually voided in the faeces.
What needs to be done next is to fill the voids between the inner nine and outer six categories with transitional objects.
Generally, however, randomization voids special handling of sparse matrices (such as identity matrices) and the tradeoffs they present.
Participants came to a central place in their community at 3 pm, when they voided their bladder.
To model the internal voids we assume that each sub-unit has a central cavity of radius rc.