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blankness

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
blank  (blngk)
adj. blank·er, blank·est
1.
a. Devoid of writing, images, or marks: a blank page; a blank screen.
b. Containing no information; unrecorded or erased: a blank tape; a blank diskette.
2. Not completed or filled in: a blank questionnaire.
3. Not having received final processing; unfinished: a blank key.
4.
a. Lacking expression; expressionless: "Although his gestures were elaborate, his face was blank" (Nathanael West). See Synonyms at empty.
b. Appearing or seeming to appear dazed or confused: greeted me with a blank stare.
5. Devoid of thought or impression: a blank mind.
6. Devoid of activity, interest, or distinctive character; empty: tried to fill the blank hours of the day.
7. Absolute; complete: a blank refusal.
n.
1. An empty space or place; a void: During the exam my mind was a blank.
2.
a. An empty space on a document to be filled in.
b. A document with one or more such spaces.
3. A manufactured article of a standard shape or form that is ready for final processing, as by stamping or cutting: a key blank.
4. A blank cartridge.
5. Something worthless, such as a losing lottery ticket.
6. A mark, usually a dash (), indicating the omission of a word or of a letter or letters.
7. The white circle in the center of a target; a bull's-eye.
v. blanked, blank·ing, blanks
v.tr.
1. To remove, as from view; obliterate: "At times the strong glare of the sun blanked it from sight" (Richard Wright).
2. To block access to: blank off a subway tunnel.
3. Sports To prevent (an opponent) from scoring.
4. To punch or stamp from flat stock, especially with a die.
v.intr.
1. To become abstracted. Often used with out: My mind blanked out for a few seconds.
2. To fail to find or remember something: I blanked when asked the name of our mayor.
3. To fade away: The music gradually blanked out.

[Middle English, white, having spaces to be filled in, from Old French blanc, white, of Germanic origin; see bhel-1 in Indo-European roots.]

blankly adv.
blankness n.
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.blankness - the state of being blank; void; emptiness
emptiness - the state of containing nothing

blankness
noun vacancy, indifference, abstraction, lack of interest, incomprehension, vacuity, inanity, absent-mindedness, obliviousness, fatuity, inattentiveness, vacuousness, incuriousness His eyes have the blankness of someone half-asleep.
Translations
blankness [ˈblæŋknɪs] n [expression, eyes] → absence f d'expression
blank verse nvers mpl non rimés
blankness
n (= emptiness)Leere f; (of expression)Ausdruckslosigkeit f; (= not understanding)Verständnislosigkeit f; (= puzzlement)Verdutztheit f, → Verblüffung f


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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
How long this lasted I have no conception, for a blankness intervened, of which I remember no more than one remembers of troubled and painful sleep.
She gave me a look that I remarked at the moment; then, visibly, with a quick blankness, seemed to try to take it back.
Then there came the old blankness, and he saw nothing but what seemed to him the face of a satyr - dark and evil - mocking him through the shadows which had surely fallen now for ever.
 
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