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WordNet
void of

adj. completely wanting or lacking; "writing barren of insight"; "young recruits destitute of experience"; "a novel devoid of wit and inventiveness"; "a life empty of happiness"; "innocent of literary merit"; "void of understanding" [syn: barren of(p), destitute of(p), devoid of(p), empty of(p), innocent of(p), void of(p)]

Usage examples of "void of".

Again that can be nothing but a union of matter which can keep in the void of things.

Here the stars seemed huge, intent, staring down with great, watchful eyes from the void of night.

You will hope that a wisp of wind, a slightest swell of the tide, the arrival of a single hungry leech, can return us, atom by atom, to the great Void of the Universe, where we would again somehow participate in the cycle of life.

Savidlin touched her shoulder, and then the elders vanished as they walked through the black void of the doorway.

He watched as the Briton gorged himself, but kept his face carefully void of expression.

Stars swam through vortices of violent colors, rather than the void of night he expected.

Naked, he sat cross-legged on the grass and inhaled the perfume it carried into the void of space.

With the deeper needs she did not dare to acknowledge within herself, the same needs he had, an empty void of heart and soul that only he could fill.

This was not the gentle dissolution of consciousness into the void of nonexistence.

At the same time, there was a feeling of almost floating motionless within the thick void of the sliph.