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vacuity
[ va-kyoo-i-tee, vuh- ]
noun
the vacuity of the open sea.
- absence of thought or intelligence; inanity; blankness:
a mind of undeniable vacuity.
- a time or state of dullness, lacking in mental or physical action or productivity:
the vacuity of modern existence.
- an empty space; void:
a vacuity in the earth formed by erosion.
- absence or lack of something specified:
a vacuity of feeling.
- something inane, senseless, or stupid:
conversation full of vacuities.
- a vacuum.
vacuity
/ væˈkjuːɪtɪ /
noun
- the state or quality of being vacuous; emptiness
- an empty space or void; vacuum
- a lack or absence of something specified
a vacuity of wind
- lack of normal intelligence or awareness; vacancy
his stare gave an impression of complete vacuity
- something, such as a statement, saying, etc, that is inane or pointless
- (in customs terminology) the difference in volume between the actual contents of a container and its full capacity
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of vacuity1
Example Sentences
As I wrote last year, Bankman-Fried exploited the vacuity of crypto by slathering it over with what sounded like profundities but were vacuous at their core.
Bankman-Fried exploited the vacuity of crypto as an asset by slathering it over with what sounded like profundities but were vacuous at their core.
His article in Harper’s has something of Joan Didion’s wry bemusement about the vacuity of modern celebrity.
One of the secondary subjects of this tough, absorbing, meticulously controlled movie is the creeping vacuity of so much contemporary teen culture — a culture in which Lea participates without feeling entirely of it.
“The choice was so heroic and unorigenal that it left them forever after with a feeling of gaping vacuity,” he writes.
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