| vacant | | |
| adj. | 1. vacant | void of thought or knowledge.; "a vacant mind" |
| ~ empty | holding or containing nothing.; "an empty glass"; "an empty room"; "full of empty seats"; "empty hours" |
| adj. | 2. vacant | without an occupant or incumbent.; "the throne is never vacant" |
| ~ empty | holding or containing nothing.; "an empty glass"; "an empty room"; "full of empty seats"; "empty hours" |
| fallow | | |
| n. (object) | 1. fallow | cultivated land that is not seeded for one or more growing seasons. |
| ~ cultivated land, ploughland, plowland, tillage, tilled land, farmland, tilth | arable land that is worked by plowing and sowing and raising crops. |
| adj. | 2. fallow | left unplowed and unseeded during a growing season.; "fallow farmland" |
| ~ unploughed, unplowed, unbroken | (of farmland) not plowed.; "unplowed fields"; "unbroken land" |
| adj. | 3. fallow | undeveloped but potentially useful.; "a fallow gold market" |
| ~ unexploited, undeveloped | undeveloped or unused.; "vast unexploited (or undeveloped) natural resources"; "taxes on undeveloped lots are low" |
| vacate | | |
| v. (social) | 1. give up, renounce, resign, vacate | leave (a job, post, or position) voluntarily.; "She vacated the position when she got pregnant"; "The chairman resigned when he was found to have misappropriated funds" |
| ~ abdicate, renounce | give up, such as power, as of monarchs and emperors, or duties and obligations.; "The King abdicated when he married a divorcee" |
| ~ leave office, step down, quit, resign | give up or retire from a position.; "The Secretary of the Navy will leave office next month"; "The chairman resigned over the financial scandal" |
| v. (motion) | 2. abandon, empty, vacate | leave behind empty; move out of.; "You must vacate your office by tonight" |
| ~ go forth, leave, go away | go away from a place.; "At what time does your train leave?"; "She didn't leave until midnight"; "The ship leaves at midnight" |
| v. (communication) | 3. annul, countermand, lift, overturn, repeal, rescind, reverse, revoke, vacate | cancel officially.; "He revoked the ban on smoking"; "lift an embargo"; "vacate a death sentence" |
| ~ go back on, renege, renege on, renegue on | fail to fulfill a promise or obligation.; "She backed out of her promise" |
| ~ strike down, cancel | declare null and void; make ineffective.; "Cancel the election results"; "strike down a law" |
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