| 1. | to make full; put as much as can be held into: to fill a jar with water. |
| 2. | to occupy to the full capacity: Water filled the basin. The crowd filled the hall. |
| 3. | to supply to an extreme degree or plentifully: to fill a house with furniture; to fill the heart with joy. |
| 4. | to satisfy fully the hunger of; satiate: The roast beef filled the diners. |
| 5. | to put into a receptacle: to fill sand into a pail. |
| 6. | to be plentiful throughout: Fish filled the rivers. |
| 7. | to extend throughout; pervade completely: The odor filled the room. |
| 8. | to furnish with an occupant: The landlord filled the vacancy yesterday. |
| 9. | to provide (an office or opening) with an incumbent: The company is eager to fill the controllership. |
| 10. | to occupy and perform the duties of (a vacancy, position, post, etc.). |
| 11. | to supply the requirements or contents of (an order), as for goods; execute. |
| 12. | to supply (a blank space) with written matter, decorative work, etc. |
| 13. | to meet satisfactorily, as requirements: This book fills a great need. |
| 14. | to make up, compound, or otherwise provide the contents of (a medical prescription). |
| 15. | to stop up or close (a cavity, hole, etc.): to fill a tooth. |
| 16. | Cookery. to insert a filling into: to fill cupcakes with custard. |
| 17. | Nautical.
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| 18. | to adulterate: to fill soaps with water. |
| 19. | Civil Engineering, Building Trades. to build up the level of (an area) with earth, stones, etc. |
| 20. | to become full: The hall filled rapidly. Our eyes filled with tears. |
| 21. | to increase in atmospheric pressure: a filling cyclone. |
| 22. | to become distended, as sails with the wind. |
| 23. | a full supply; enough to satisfy want or desire: to eat one's fill. |
| 24. | an amount of something sufficient for filling; charge. |
| 25. | Civil Engineering, Building Trades. a quantity of earth, stones, etc., for building up the level of an area of ground: These houses were built on fill. Compare backfill. |
| 26. | the feed and water in the digestive tract of a livestock animal, esp. that consumed before marketing. |
| 27. | fill away, Nautical.
|
| 28. | fill in,
|
| 29. | fill out,
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| 30. | fill up,
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| 31. | fill and stand on, Nautical. (of a sailing vessel) to proceed on a tack after being hove to or halted facing the wind; fill away. |
| 32. | fill the bill. bill 1 (def. 16). |
fill (fĭl) v. filled, fill·ing, fills v. tr.
To become full. n.
fill in
Idiom(s): fill (someone's) shoesTo assume someone's position or duties. Idiom(s): fill the bill Informal To serve a particular purpose. [Middle English fillen, from Old English fyllan; see pelə-1 in Indo-European roots.] fill'a·ble adj. |
Fill
The action of completing or satisfying an order for a security or commodity. It is the basic act in transacting stocks, bonds or any other type of security.
Investopedia Commentary
For example, if a trader places a buy order for a stock at $50 and a seller agrees to the price, the sale has been made and the order has been filled. The $50 price is the execution price, which also makes it the fill price - it is the price that allows the transaction to be completed.
Related Links
The Nitty-Gritty Of Executing A Trade
Understanding Order Execution
See also: Commodity, Execution, Fill or Kill - FOK, Kill, Market Order, Order, Security, Transaction
fill
fill
In addition to the idioms beginning with fill, also see back and fill; get one's fill of. Also see under full.