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    vacate
    /vəˈkeɪt/

    verb

    • 1. leave (a place that one previously occupied): "rooms must be vacated by noon on the last day of your holiday" Similar leaveget out ofmove out ofevacuateOpposite occupyinhabit
    • 2. cancel or annul (a judgement, contract, or charge): "the Justices vacated a ruling by the federal appeals court"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Learn the meaning, synonyms, examples, and history of the verb vacate, which means to deprive of an incumbent or occupant, to make legally void, or to leave a place. See also related words and entries near vacate.

  3. Vacate means to leave a place, position, or job so that it is available for others. Learn how to use this formal verb in different contexts, such as law, business, and travel, with examples and synonyms.

  4. Vacate definition: to give up possession or occupancy of. See examples of VACATE used in a sentence.

  5. Learn the meaning of vacate, a formal verb that means to leave a place, position or decision so that it is available for others. Find out how to use vacate in different contexts, such as law, business and everyday situations, and see related words and phrases.

  6. When you vacate something, you leave it behind, usually empty. When you stay at a hotel, you're required to vacate the room at check-out time. The same goes for the last day of your lease on your apartment or after closing on the sale of your house.

  7. 1. to give up possession or occupancy of: to vacate an apartment. 2. to give up or relinquish (an office, position, etc.). 3. to render inoperative; annul: to vacate a contract. 4. to cause to be empty or unoccupied; make vacant. v.i.

  8. Vacate means to leave or give up a place, job, or position, or to make something void or ineffective. Learn how to use vacate in different contexts, with synonyms and examples from Collins English Dictionary.