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HOME | Definition of blank (BLANK, Blank)


    Blank \Blank\, n.
    1. Any void space; a void space on paper, or in any written
    instrument; an interval void of consciousness, action,
    result, etc; a void.
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    I can not write a paper full, I used to do; and yet
    I will not forgive a blank of half an inch from you.
    --Swift.
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    From this time there ensues a long blank in the
    history of French legislation. --Hallam.
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    I was ill. I can't tell how long -- it was a blank.
    --G. Eliot.
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    2. A lot by which nothing is gained; a ticket in a lottery on
    which no prize is indicated.
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    In Fortune's lottery lies
    A heap of blanks, like this, for one small prize.
    --Dryden.
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    3. A paper unwritten; a paper without marks or characters a
    blank ballot; -- especially, a paper on which are to be
    inserted designated items of information, for which spaces
    are left vacant; a bland form.
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    The freemen signified their approbation by an
    inscribed vote, and their dissent by a blank.
    --Palfrey.
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    4. A paper containing the substance of a legal instrument, as
    a deed, release, writ, or execution, with spaces left to
    be filled with names, date, descriptions, etc.
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    5. The point aimed at in a target, marked with a white spot;
    hence, the object to which anything is directed.
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    Let me still remain
    The true blank of thine eye. --Shak.
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    6. Aim; shot; range. [Obs.]
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    I have stood . . . within the blank of his
    displeasure
    For my free speech. --Shak.
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    7. A kind of base silver money, first coined in England by
    Henry V., and worth about 8 pence; also, a French coin of
    the seventeenth century, worth about 4 pence. --Nares.
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    8. (Mech.) A piece of metal prepared to be made into
    something by a further operation, as a coin, screw, nuts.
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    9. (Dominoes) A piece or division of a piece, without spots;
    as, the "double blank"; the "six blank."
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    In blank, with an essential portion to be supplied by
    another; as, to make out a check in blank.
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    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    Blank \Blank\, a. [OE. blank, blonc, blaunc, blaunche, fr. F.
    blanc, fem. blanche, fr. OHG. blanch shining, bright, white,
    G. blank; akin to E. blink, cf. also AS. blanc white. ?98.
    See Blink, and cf. 1st Blanch.]
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    1. Of a white or pale color; without color.
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    To the blank moon
    Her office they prescribed. --Milton.
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    2. Free from writing, printing, or marks; having an empty
    space to be filled in with some special writing; -- said
    of checks, official documents, etc.; as, blank paper; a
    blank check; a blank ballot.
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    3. Utterly confounded or discomfited.
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    Adam . . . astonied stood, and blank. --Milton.
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    4. Empty; void; without result; fruitless; as, a blank space;
    a blank day.
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    5. Lacking characteristics which give variety; as, a blank
    desert; a blank wall; destitute of interests, affections,
    hopes, etc.; as, to live a blank existence; destitute of
    sensations; as, blank unconsciousness.
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    6. Lacking animation and intelligence, or their associated
    characteristics, as expression of face, look, etc.;
    expressionless; vacant. "Blank and horror-stricken faces."
    --C. Kingsley.
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    The blank . . . glance of a half returned
    consciousness. --G. Eliot.
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    7. Absolute; downright; unmixed; as, blank terror.
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    Blank bar (Law), a plea put in to oblige the plaintiff in
    an action of trespass to assign the certain place where
    the trespass was committed; -- called also common bar.


    Blank cartridge, a cartridge containing no ball.

    Blank deed. See Deed.

    Blank door, or Blank window (Arch.), a depression in a
    wall of the size of a door or window, either for
    symmetrical effect, or for the more convenient insertion
    of a door or window at a future time, should it be needed.


    Blank indorsement (Law), an indorsement which omits the
    name of the person in whose favor it is made; it is
    usually made by simply writing the name of the indorser on
    the back of the bill.

    Blank line (Print.), a vacant space of the breadth of a
    line, on a printed page; a line of quadrats.

    Blank tire (Mech.), a tire without a flange.

    Blank tooling. See Blind tooling, under Blind.

    Blank verse. See under Verse.

    Blank wall, a wall in which there is no opening; a dead
    wall.
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    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    Blank \Blank\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Blanked; p. pr. & vb. n.
    Blanking.] [Cf. 3d Blanch.]
    1. To make void; to annul. [Obs.] --Spenser.
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    2. To blanch; to make blank; to damp the spirits of; to
    dispirit or confuse. [Obs.]
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    Each opposite that blanks the face of joy. --Shak.
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    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    blank
    adj 1: of a surface; not written or printed on; "blank pages";
    "fill in the blank spaces"; "a clean page"; "wide
    white margins" [syn: clean, white]
    2: void of expression; "a blank stare"
    3: not charged with a bullet; "a blank cartridge"
    n 1: a blank character used to separate successive words in
    writing or printing; "he said the space is the most
    important character in the alphabet" [syn: space]
    2: a substitute for a taboo word; "I hit the blank blank car"
    3: a blank gap or missing part [syn: lacuna]
    4: a piece of material ready to be made into something
    5: a cartridge containing an explosive charge but no bullet
    [syn: dummy, blank shell]
    v : keep the opposing (baseball) team from winning

    WordNet (r) 2.0


    248 Moby Thesaurus words for "blank":
    Olympian, absence, absolute, aloof, arid, awayness, backward, bald,
    bare, barren, bashful, bewildered, black, blah, bland, blankminded,
    bleached, blind, blind-alley, bloodless, box, calm, cecal,
    characterless, chasm, chilled, chilly, chirograph, choked,
    choked off, clean slate, clear, closed, cold, colorless, complete,
    confused, constrained, constricted, contracted, cool, dazed, dead,
    dead-end, deadpan, deprivation, detached, devoid, discomfited,
    disconcerted, discreet, dismal, distant, docket, document, dossier,
    downright, draggy, drearisome, dreary, dry, dryasdust, dull, dusty,
    effete, elephantine, emotionless, emptiness, empty, empty space,
    empty-headed, empty-minded, empty-pated, empty-skulled, etiolated,
    expressionless, fade, fatuous, featureless, file, fishy, flat,
    forbidding, form, frigid, frosty, glassy, guarded, heavy, helpless,
    ho-hum, hollow, holograph, icy, impassive, impersonal,
    inaccessible, inane, inanity, incogitant, inexcitable,
    inexpressive, insipid, instrument, introverted, jejune, lack,
    leaden, legal document, legal instrument, legal paper, lifeless,
    line, low-spirited, mindless, modest, naked, neverness, nil,
    nirvanic, nonexistence, nonoccurrence, nonplussed, nonpresence,
    nothing, nothingness, nowhereness, nude, null, null and void,
    oblivious, official document, offish, out-and-out, overlook,
    oversight, pale, pallid, paper, papers, parchment, passive,
    pedestrian, perfect, perplexed, personal file, plain, plodding,
    pointless, poker-faced, poky, ponderous, preterition, pure,
    quietistic, rattlebrained, rattleheaded, regular, relaxed, remote,
    removed, repressed, reserved, restrained, reticent, retiring, roll,
    scatterbrained, scrip, script, scroll, sheer, shrinking, shut,
    skip, slow, solemn, space, spiritless, squeezed shut, standoff,
    standoffish, stark, sterile, stiff, stodgy, straight-out,
    strangulated, stuffy, subdued, subtraction, superficial,
    suppressed, tabula rasa, tasteless, tedious, thoughtfree,
    thoughtless, tranquil, unadorned, unadulterated, unaffable,
    unapproachable, unarrayed, uncomplicated, uncongenial, undecked,
    undecorated, undemonstrative, undressed, unembellished,
    unexpansive, unexpressive, unfurbished, ungarnished, ungenial,
    unideaed, unintellectual, unlively, unmixed, unoccupied, unopen,
    unopened, unornamented, unqualified, unreasoning, unrelieved,
    unsophisticated, unthinking, untrimmed, unvarnished, unvented,
    unventilated, utter, vacant, vacuous, vacuum, vapid, void, want,
    white, with nothing inside, withdrawn, without content, wooden,
    writ, writing, zero

    Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0


    BLANK. A space left in writing to be filled, up with one or more words, in
    order to make sense. 1. In what cases the ambiguity occasioned by blanks not
    filled before execution of the writing may be explained 2. in what cases it
    cannot be explained.
    2. - 1. When a blank is left in a written agreement which need not -
    have been reduced to writing, and would have been equally binding whether
    written or unwritten, it is presumed, in an action for the non-performance
    of the contract, parol evidence might be admitted to explain the blank. And
    where a written instrument, which was made professedly to record a fact, is
    produced as evidence of that fact which it purports to record, and a blank
    appears in a material part, the omission may be supplied by other proof. 1
    Phil. Ev. 475 1 Wils. 215; 7 Verm. R. 522; 6 Verm. R. 411. Hence a blank
    left in an award for a name, was allowed to be supplied by parol proof. 2
    Dall. 180. But where a creditor signs a deed of composition leaving the
    amount of his debt in blank, he binds himself to all existing debts. 1 B. &
    A. 101; S. C. 2 Stark. R. 195.
    3. - 2. If a blank is left in a policy of insurance for the name of the
    place of destination of a ship, it will avoid the policy. Molloy, b. 2, c.
    7, s. 14; Park, Ins. 22; Wesk. Ins. 42. A paper signed and sealed in blank,
    with verbal authority to. fill it up, which is afterwards done, is void,
    unless afterwards delivered or acknowledged and adopted. 1 Yerg. 69, 149; 1
    Hill, 267 2 N. & M. 125; 2 Brock. 64; 2 Dev. 379 1 Ham. 368; 6 Gill & John.
    250; but see contra, 17 S. & R. 438. Lines ought to be drawn wherever there
    are blanks, to prevent anything from being inserted afterwards. 2 Valin's
    Comm. 151.
    4. When the filling up blanks after the execution of deeds and other
    writings will vitiate them or not, see 3 Vin. Abr. 268; Moore, 547; Cro.
    Eliz. 626; 1 Vent. 185; 2 Lev. 35; 2 Ch. R. 187; 1 Anst. 228; 5 Mass. 538; 4
    Binn. 1; 9 Crancb, 28; Yelv. 96; 2 Show. 161; 1 Saund. Pl. & Ev. 77; 4 B. &
    A. 672; Com. Dig. Fait, F 1; 4 @Bing. 123; 2 Hill. Ab. c. 25, Sec. 80; n. 33,
    Sec. 54-and 72; 1 Ohio, R. 368; 4 Binn. R. 1; 6 Cowen, 118; Wright, 176.

    Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)


    BLANK-:VERSE:, n. Unrhymed iambic pentameters -- the most difficult
    kind of English verse to write acceptably; a kind, therefore, much
    affected by those who cannot acceptably write any kind.

    THE DEVIL'S DICTIONARY ((C)1911 Released April 15 1993)




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