Word of the Day
null \ NULL \ adjective
Definition
1a: having no legal or binding force
1b: invalid
1b: invalid
2a: amounting to nothing
2b: nil
3a: having no value
3b: insignificant
4: having no elements
Examples
The court will declare the city ordinance null if it is found to be in conflict with state law.
"Michigan voters in November rejected two ballot questions that would essentially have allowed the state Natural Resources Commission to decide the hunting of wolves. But a legislative maneuver made those votes null."
— John Barnes, Kalamazoo (Michigan) Gazette, December 23, 2014
"Michigan voters in November rejected two ballot questions that would essentially have allowed the state Natural Resources Commission to decide the hunting of wolves. But a legislative maneuver made those votes null."
— John Barnes, Kalamazoo (Michigan) Gazette, December 23, 2014
Did You Know?
English borrowed null from the Anglo-French nul, meaning "not any." That word, in turn, traces to the Latin word nullus, from ne-, meaning "not," and ullus, meaning "any." We sometimes use null with the meaning "lacking meaning or value," as in "By the time I heard it, the news was null."
In math, null is sometimes used to mean "containing nothing"; for example, the set of all whole numbers that are divisible by zero is the null set (that is, there are no numbers that fit that description). The phrase null and void is a term in its own right, defined as "having no validity."
In math, null is sometimes used to mean "containing nothing"; for example, the set of all whole numbers that are divisible by zero is the null set (that is, there are no numbers that fit that description). The phrase null and void is a term in its own right, defined as "having no validity."
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