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Vice   /vaɪs/   Listen
adjective
Vice  adj.  Denoting one who in certain cases may assume the office or duties of a superior; designating an officer or an office that is second in rank or authority; as, vice president; vice agent; vice consul, etc.
Vice admiral.
(a)
An officer holding rank next below an admiral. By the existing laws, the rank of admiral and vice admiral in the United States Navy will cease at the death of the present incumbents.
(b)
A civil officer, in Great Britain, appointed by the lords commissioners of the admiralty for exercising admiralty jurisdiction within their respective districts.
Vice admiralty, the office of a vice admiral.
Vice-admiralty court, a court with admiralty jurisdiction, established by authority of Parliament in British possessions beyond the seas.
Vice chamberlain, an officer in court next in rank to the lord chamberlain. (Eng.)
Vice chancellor.
(a)
(Law) An officer next in rank to a chancellor.
(b)
An officer in a university, chosen to perform certain duties, as the conferring of degrees, in the absence of the chancellor.
(c)
(R. C. Ch.) The cardinal at the head of the Roman Chancery.
Vice consul, a subordinate officer, authorized to exercise consular functions in some particular part of a district controlled by a consul.
Vice king, one who acts in the place of a king; a viceroy.
Vice legate, a legate second in rank to, or acting in place of, another legate.
Vice presidency, the office of vice president.
Vice president, an officer next in rank below a president.



noun
Vice  n.  
1.
A defect; a fault; an error; a blemish; an imperfection; as, the vices of a political constitution; the vices of a horse. "Withouten vice of syllable or letter." "Mark the vice of the procedure."
2.
A moral fault or failing; especially, immoral conduct or habit, as in the indulgence of degrading appetites; customary deviation in a single respect, or in general, from a right standard, implying a defect of natural character, or the result of training and habits; a harmful custom; immorality; depravity; wickedness; as, a life of vice; the vice of intemperance. "I do confess the vices of my blood." "Ungoverned appetite... a brutish vice." "When vice prevails, and impious men bear sway, The post of honor is a private station."
3.
The buffoon of the old English moralities, or moral dramas, having the name sometimes of one vice, sometimes of another, or of Vice itself; called also Iniquity. Note: This character was grotesquely dressed in a cap with ass's ears, and was armed with a dagger of lath: one of his chief employments was to make sport with the Devil, leaping on his back, and belaboring him with the dagger of lath till he made him roar. The Devil, however, always carried him off in the end. "How like you the Vice in the play?... I would not give a rush for a Vice that has not a wooden dagger to snap at everybody."
Synonyms: Crime; sin; iniquity; fault. See Crime.



Vice  n.  
1.
(Mech.) A kind of instrument for holding work, as in filing. Same as Vise.
2.
A tool for drawing lead into cames, or flat grooved rods, for casements. (Written also vise)
3.
A gripe or grasp. (Obs.)



preposition
Vice  prep.  In the place of; in the stead; as, A. B. was appointed postmaster vice C. D. resigned.



verb
Vice  v. t.  (past & past part. viced; pres. part. vicing)  To hold or squeeze with a vice, or as if with a vice. "The coachman's hand was viced between his upper and lower thigh."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Vice" Quotes from Famous Books



... on the Plains of New Granada. Scarcely had he grown familiar with his new centre of action when the troops of Morillo were turned westward for the purpose of curbing the rebellious spirits in the neighboring Vice-Royalty,—when, quicker than thought, Paez was once more over the mountains, and recovered by a sudden swoop the Llanos of Barinas. Thenceforward, this region remained the surest foothold of the revolution in Venezuela. Encircled with Spanish ...
— Atlantic Monthly Vol. 3, No. 16, February, 1859 • Various

... with which the Republican party was organized says much for the practical ability of its leaders. The moving spirits in the central committee were Vice-Admiral Candido dos Reis, Affonso Costa (now Minister of Justice), Joao Chagas, and Dr. Miguel Bombarda. Simoes Raposo spoke in the name of the Freemasons; the Carbonaria Portugueza, a powerful secret society, was represented by Machado dos Santos, an officer in the ...
— The Great Events by Famous Historians, Vol. 21 - The Recent Days (1910-1914) • Charles F. Horne, Editor

... old, he could hardly endure economy, being of opinion that want is little to be dreaded when a man has but little time left to be miserable. He was well pleased with nature, and did not complain of fortune. He hated vice, was indulgent to frailties, and lamented misfortunes. He sought not after the failings of men with a design to expose them; he only found what was ridiculous in them for his own amusement: he had a secret pleasure in discovering ...
— The Memoirs of Count Grammont, Complete • Anthony Hamilton

... practical morality will serve us better than any traditional code. So only shall we learn to see if we cannot rid love of stress and pain that is unendurable. We force women and men into rebellion, into fearing concealments, and the dark and furtive ways of vice. For this reason we must, I believe, make the regulations of law as wide as possible, taking care only that mothers and all children must be safeguarded, whether in legal marriage or outside. All of which forces the conclusion: the same act of love cannot be good or bad just because ...
— The Truth About Woman • C. Gasquoine Hartley

... love and heroism. Such was the feeling, perhaps the unconscious reasoning, of the founders of modern literature, as they began their labors in the alcoves of that church architecture which covered Christendom, embracing and symbolically expressing all its ideas and institutes. Therefore some vice of imperfection, a character of frivolity, or an artificially serious treatment of lightsome subjects marked all the literature of the time, which resembled that grotesque and unaccountable mathematical figure that has its ...
— Atlantic Monthly Volume 6, No. 34, August, 1860 • Various


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