'no vacancies'
1Vacancies — Vacancy Va can*cy, n.; pl. {Vacancies}. [Cf. F. vacance.] [1913 Webster] 1. The quality or state of being vacant; emptiness; hence, freedom from employment; intermission; leisure; idleness; listlessness. [1913 Webster] All dispositions to… …
2vacancies — va·can·cy || veɪkÉ™nsɪ n. emptiness; available space, empty room at a hotel; available position, job opening …
3Australian referendum, 1977 (Senate Casual Vacancies) — The referendum of 21 May, 1977 approved an amendment to the Australian constitution concerning the filling of casual vacancies in the Senate. Technically it was a vote on the Constitution Alteration (Senate Casual Vacancies) 1977 which, after… …
4Senior Judiciary (Vacancies and Incapacity) (Scotland) Act 2006 — The Senior Judiciary (Vacancies and Incapacity) (Scotland) Act 2006 is an Act of the Scottish Parliament passed in response to the incapacity of Arthur Hamilton, Lord Hamilton the Lord President of the Court of Session.It is intended to ensure… …
5pair of vacancies — vakansijų pora statusas T sritis fizika atitikmenys: angl. double vacancy; pair of vacancies; pair of voids vok. Doppelleerstelle, f; Doppelvakanz, f; Leerstellenpaar, n rus. двойная вакансия, f; пара вакансий, f pranc. bilacune, f; paire de… …
6European System for the International Clearing of Vacancies and Applications for Employment — (SEDOC) A Commission agency for the exchange of information between Member States …
7Cheshire West and Chester Council election, 2011 — 2008 ← 5 May 2011 → 2015 …
8The Wright System — Rules and procedures for a Reiterative Proportional Single Transferable Vote Computerised Count The Wright system (named after the late Jack Wright, author of the Book Mirror of a Nation s Mind and past President of the Proportional… …
9Diffusion creep — refers to the deformation of crystalline solids by the diffusion of vacancies through their crystal lattice.[1] Diffusion creep results in plastic deformation rather than brittle failure of the material. Diffusion creep is more sensitive to… …
10Crystallographic defects in diamond — Synthetic diamonds of various colors grown by the high pressure high temperature technique, the diamond size is 2 mm …