voidance
11voidance — void·ance …
12voidance — void•ance [[t]ˈvɔɪd ns[/t]] n. 1) the act of voiding 2) law annulment, as of a contract 3) law rel vacancy, as of a benefice • Etymology: 1350–1400; ME, aph. var. of avoidance …
13voidance — /ˈvɔɪdns/ (say voydns) noun 1. the act of voiding. 2. annulment, as of a contract. 3. ejection from a benefice. 4. vacancy, as of a benefice. {aphetic variant of avoidance} …
14voidance — A vacancy. Ejection from a benefice …
15voidance — n. 1 Eccl. a vacancy in a benefice. 2 the act or an instance of voiding; the state of being voided. Etymology: ME f. OF (as VOID) …
16discharge — dis·charge 1 /dis chärj, dis ˌchärj/ vt 1: to release from an obligation: as a: to relieve of a duty under an instrument (as a contract or a negotiable instrument); also: to render (an instrument) no longer enforceable a formal instrument...may… …
17system — 1. [TA] A consistent and complex whole made up of correlated and semiindependent parts. A complex of functionally related anatomic structures. 2. The entire organism seen as a complex organization of parts. 3. Any complex of structures… …
18avoidance — I (cancellation) noun abrogation, annulling, annulment, cancelling, cessation, discontinuation, dismissal, invalidation, making useless, nullifying, quashing, removal, rendering void, rescission, setting aside, vacating, vacation, voidance… …
19cancellation — I (Roget s IV) n. Syn. canceling, annulment, nullification, abrogation, dissolution, dissolving, invalidation, invalidating, revocation, revoking, repudiation, repeal, abolition, abolishing, retraction, retracting, reversing, reversal, annulling …
20discharge — v unload, unburden, disburden, free, relieve, remove. 2. fire off, shoot, detonate, explode, burst; let off, let fly, set off; deliver a charge, give vent to. 3. emit, pour forth, send forth, send out, eject; gush, disembogue, cast forth; void,… …