13 example sentences using vacate.
Vacate used in a sentence
Vacate in a sentence as a verb
It is about an old lady who refuses to vacate her house so that they can make a highway.
Accordingly, -3- we vacate the judgment of conviction and remand the case to the district court.
China is just about ready to vacate the lowest rungs of the ladder, and Bangladesh is getting on it.
Now they refuse to pay for the remaining 14 days of the original agreement, and also refuse to vacate after 44 days.
Similarly when you vacate an apartment and leave all your belongings behind, they become the property of the landlord.
"We are gratified by the Court's decision today to vacate the previous FCC's order [to impose rules about net neutrality].
"If you throw a cop in my face, I'm more inclined to be stubborn, but nothing makes me want to vacate a place of business quite so much as an annoying salesman.
"Also in the sidebar:"Notice to vacate: Federal law requires new owners to give tenants at least 90 days' notice before seeking to evict them.
Does that mean they have nothing to improve in current position & they should just vacate the place so their direct report can take his/her place?As Mark says in the article, it is the difficult path.
This ended somewhat peacefully: Withrington agreed to pay Inge a settlement of $14,000 in resettlement fees, and she signed a contract agreeing to vacate the property within 60 days.
I think Google should definitely be over-careful when deciding to vacate the searcher's terms due to suspected miss-spelling but I don't agree that it should vacate the feature altogether.
Because the Commission has failed to establish that the anti-discrimination and anti-blocking rules do not impose per se common carrier obligations, we vacate those portions of the Open Internet Order.
Ecuadorian diplomats would continue to have diplomatic protection, presumably would be given long notice of the requirement to vacate the embassy, and move goods from it... but Mr Assange would not have any of that protection.
Vacate definitions
leave (a job, post, or position) voluntarily; "She vacated the position when she got pregnant"; "The chairman resigned when he was found to have misappropriated funds"
leave behind empty; move out of; "You must vacate your office by tonight"