A hamper that holds dirty clothes to be washed or wet clothes to be dried.
An official who can invalidate or nullify.
A piece of chain mail covering a place unprotected by armor plate.
1The voider may have spoilt their passage by trying to tag along.
2The functions of a voider were somewhat those of a crumb-tray.
3Squatting in the humus a little way from them she saw the other voider.
4Something tiny crawled in the voider's palm, like a flea.
5The voider's throes slowed, then stopped.
6Time's voider, subsizer to the worms, in whom death, who formerly devoured our ancestors, now chews the cud.
7Being set down, she casts her face into a platform, which dureth the meal, and is taken away with the voider.
8Off to her right she saw the voider rise from its haunches, its eyes not on her but on the open door.
9It was known in the Reconciled Dominions as a voider, one of a brutal species that haunted the wastes north of the Lenten Way.
10So they pay to have the voiders thrown into the In Ovo.
11The voiders had shown little interest in the arrival of their leader's body.
12It had three occupants: the voiders and another, sitting in the back seat.
13It was not, he knew, one of the voiders.
14Pewter voiders abounded and were advertised in newspapers, as were wicker and china voiders in 1740.
15Let me have the surprise, when I see it face to face. He turned to the voiders.
16The voiders were at his feet in moments, dutifully removing the scraps of matter from Dowd's handmade shoes.