When you're busy with work, you're occupied — you're engaged, or distracted by it. And when a country is occupied, it's been invaded and taken over by a foreign power — this last meaning was first used during World War II, referring to German-occupied France.
to have, hold, or take as a separate space: The orchard occupies half the farm. to be a resident or tenant of: Our company occupied the three top floors of that building. spend: to occupy time reading. involve: We occupied the children with a game.
- busy doing or thinking about something: keep the brain occupied!; she was fully occupied with driving.
OCCUPIED meaning: 1. An occupied place is being controlled by an army or group of people that has moved into it: 2…. Learn more.
Keep occupied with different things by day, then meet for dinner and discuss what happened.
Definition of occupied adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.
occupied definition: being used or reserved for use. Check meanings, examples, usage tips, pronunciation, domains, and related words. Discover expressions like "keep one's mind occupied", "enemy-occupied", "under-occupied".
Something that's occupied is being used or is unavailable. If the sign on the restroom door says occupied, it means there's someone in there and you're just going to have to wait.
Engaged; in use; being used by a person and not free for use by someone else. Opposite of free, available, and unoccupied. Inhabited, lived-in, tenanted; having residents; — of dwelling units. Overrun, taken over; — of countries or territories. Opposite of unoccupied. Busy; actively or fully engaged in some activity; — of people. Opposite of idle.