occupy

[ok-yuh-pahy] /ˈɒk yəˌpaɪ/
verb (used with object), occupied, occupying.
1.
to take or fill up (space, time, etc.):
I occupied my evenings reading novels.
2.
to engage or employ the mind, energy, or attention of:
Occupy the children with a game while I prepare dinner.
3.
to be a resident or tenant of; dwell in:
We occupied the same house for 20 years.
4.
to hold (a position, office, etc.).
5.
to take possession and control of (a place), as by military invasion.
6.
(usually initial capital letter) to participate in a protest about (a social or political issue), as by taking possession or control of buildings or public places that are symbolic of the issue: Let’s Occupy our voting rights!
The Occupy Wall Street movement of late 2011 was a protest against economic inequality.
verb (used without object), occupied, occupying.
7.
to take or hold possession.
8.
(usually initial capital letter) to participate in a protest about a social or political issue.
adjective
9.
(usually initial capital letter) of or pertaining to a protest about a social or political issue, as in Occupy movement; Occupy protest; Occupy candidate:
the Occupy movement for social justice.
Origin
1300-50; Middle English occupien < Middle French occuper < Latin occupāre to seize, take hold, take up, make one's own, equivalent to oc- oc- + -cup-, combining form of capere to take, seize + -āre infinitive suffix
Related forms
occupiable, adjective
occupier, noun
misoccupy, verb, misoccupied, misoccupying.
overoccupied, adjective
reoccupy, verb (used with object), reoccupied, reoccupying.
self-occupied, adjective
underoccupied, adjective
well-occupied, adjective
Synonyms
1, 2, 4, 5. See have. 2. use, busy. 5. capture, seize.
Examples from the web for occupied
  • Protesters also barred reporters from entering the occupied space.
  • Scientists suspect the behavior may benefit the birds by attracting insects or signaling to other owls that the nest is occupied.
  • Lovers' hearts, after all, should be occupied with warmer thoughts than those of health risks.
  • They were not some early croc offshoot that filled the niche that would later be occupied by predatory dinosaurs.
  • Keeping the kids occupied during fieldwork expeditions calls for special tools in some parts of the world.
  • Lemon ant trees occupied by other ant species, or by no ants, always had other plants growing nearby.
  • To the south, they occupied the more temperate and rainy lands found there.
  • Good choice for color in place to be occupied in summer by tuberous begonias.
  • When enough grubs have occupied a fish, they make it swim closer to the water's surface.
  • Over the next hours, students and friends occupied multiple rooms of the building while police watched nervously.
British Dictionary definitions for occupied

occupy

/ˈɒkjʊˌpaɪ/
verb (transitive) -pies, -pying, -pied
1.
to live or be established in (a house, flat, office, etc)
2.
(often passive) to keep (a person) busy or engrossed; engage the attention of
3.
(often passive) to take up (a certain amount of time or space)
4.
to take and hold possession of, esp as a demonstration: students occupied the college buildings
5.
to fill or hold (a position or rank)
Word Origin
C14: from Old French occuper, from Latin occupāre to seize hold of, from ob- (intensive) + capere to take
Word Origin and History for occupied
adj.

late 15c., past participle adjective from occupy (v.). Of countries overrun by others, from 1940, originally with reference to France.

occupy

v.

mid-14c., "to take possession of," also "to take up space or time, employ (someone)," irregularly borrowed from Old French occuper "occupy (a person or place), hold, seize" (13c.) or directly from Latin occupare "take over, seize, take into possession, possess, occupy," from ob "over" (see ob-) + intensive form of capere "to grasp, seize" (see capable). The final syllable of the English word is difficult to explain, but it is as old as the record; perhaps from a modification made in Anglo-French. During 16c.-17c. a common euphemism for "have sexual intercourse with" (sense attested from early 15c.), which caused it to fall from polite usage.

"A captaine? Gods light these villaines wil make the word as odious as the word occupy, which was an excellent good worde before it was il sorted." [Doll Tearsheet in "2 Henry IV"]
Related: Occupied; occupying.