Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why
blank
adjective
Void; empty; consequently white; as a blank paper.
blank
White or pale; as the blank moon.
blank
Pale from fear or terror; hence confused; confounded; dispirited; dejected. Adam--astonished stood, and blank.
blank
Without rhyme; as blank verse, verse in which rhyme is wanting.
blank
Pure; entire; complete.
blank
Not containing balls or bullets; as blank cartridges. This word is applied to various other objects, usually in the sense of destitution, emptiness; as a blank line; a blank space, in a book.
blank
noun
Any void space; a void space on paper, or in any written instrument.
blank
A lot by which nothing is gained; a ticket in a lottery which draws no prize.
blank
A paper unwritten; a paper without marks or characters.
blank
A paper containing the substance of a legal instrument, as a deed, release, writ or execution, with vacant spaces left to be filled with names, date, descriptions.
blank
The point to which an arrow is directed, marked with white paper.
blank
Aim; shot.
blank
Object to which any thing is directed.
blank
A small copper coin formerly current in France, at the rate of deniers Tournois. There were also pieces of three blanks, and of six; but they are now become moneys of account. Blank-bar, in law, a common bar, or a plea in bar, which, in an action of trespass, is put in to oblige the plaintiff to assign the place where the trespass was committed. Point-blank, in gunnery, the shot of a gun leveled horizontally. The distance between the piece, and the point where the shot first touches the ground, is called the point-blank range; the shot proceeding on a straight line, without curving.
blank
verb transitive
To make void; to annul.
blank
To deprive of color, the index of health and spirits; to damp the spirits; to dispirit or confuse; as, to blank the face of joy.