That naming is confusing
When you ask
var(X).
you are actually asking whether the variable name X currently (at query time, a non-logical concept) designates and uninstantiated term, (aka. and unbound term, aka. an "empty storage cell").
The predicate would be less confusing if it had been named
unbound(X).
However, an "empty storage cell" (named by a variable name or unnamed and deep inside a term at some term tree leaf position) is traditionally called a "variable" or an "unbound variable". So be it.
"free" is also confusing
Note that the above text uses "free", which is even more confusing. "free" as an adjective applied to a variable means that said variable (in a first-order logic formula, a lambda expression etc.) is not bound by a quantifier (making the formula not well-formed). For example:
∃X: f(X,Y)
Y is free in the formula above.
On the other hand, the Mercury language uses the adjectives "free" and "bound"
Insts, modes, and mode definitions:
if the node is “free”, then the corresponding node in the term (if any) is a free variable that does not share with any other variable (we call such variables distinct); if the node is “bound”, then the corresponding node in the term (if any) is a function symbol.
Compare with Common Lisp's function
boundp
checks whether the variable name passed as argument (and thus quoted: `'x`) is bound to something:
(setq x 1) => 1 (boundp 'x) => true (makunbound 'x) => X (boundp 'x) => false
It behaves like nonvar/1: `(boundp 'x)` evaluates to false
if the symbol 'x designates an actual value. (It throws the argument is not actually a symbol).
Unlike in Prolog, you can make a bound symbol "unbound" again.
More on naming
Some notes on the ambiguity concerning the word "variable" can be found here