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  1. Dictionary
    bind
    [bīnd]
    verb
    bind (verb) · binds (third person present) · bound (past tense) · bound (past participle) · binding (present participle)
    1. tie or fasten (something) tightly:
      "the logs were bound together with ropes" · "the magician bound her wrists with a silk scarf"
      • restrain (someone) by tying their hands and feet:
        "the raider then bound and gagged Mr. Glenn"
      • wrap (something) tightly:
        "her hair was bound up in a towel"
      • bandage (a wound):
        "he cleaned the wound and bound it up with a clean dressing" · "they bound his wounds as best they could, using pieces of fabric ripped from their shirts"
      • (be bound with)
        (of an object) be encircled by something, typically metal bands, so as to have greater strength:
        "an ancient oak chest bound with brass braces"
    2. cohere or cause to cohere in a single mass:
      "mix the flour with the coconut and enough egg white to bind them" · "clay is made up chiefly of tiny soil particles that bind together tightly"
      • cause (painting pigments) to form a smooth medium by mixing them with oil:
        "use a white that is bound in linseed oil"
      • hold by chemical bonding:
        "a protein in a form that can bind DNA"
    3. cause (people) to feel united:
      "it's music that has bound us together" · "we have many ties that bind us—historical, cultural, and economical"
    4. impose a legal or contractual obligation on:
      "a party who signs a document will normally be bound by its terms"
      • (be bound by)
        be hampered or constrained by:
        "Sarah did not want to be bound by a rigid timetable"
      • formal
        (bind oneself)
        make a contractual or enforceable undertaking:
        "the government cannot bind itself as to the form of subsequent legislation"
      • secure (a contract), typically with a sum of money.
      • indenture (someone) as an apprentice:
        "he was bound apprentice at the age of sixteen"
    5. fix together and enclose (the pages of a book) in a cover:
      "a small, fat volume, bound in red morocco"
    6. trim (the edge of a piece of material) with a decorative strip:
      "a ruffle with the edges bound in a contrasting color"
    7. logic
      (of a quantifier) be applied to (a given variable) so that the variable falls within its scope.
    8. linguistics
      (of a rule or set of grammatical conditions) determine the relationship between (coreferential noun phrases).
    noun
    bind (noun) · binds (plural noun)
    1. a problematical situation:
      "he is in a political bind over the welfare issue"
    2. formal
      a statutory constraint:
      "the moral bind of the law"
    3. music
      another term for tie
    4. another term for bine
    Origin
    Old English bindan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch and German binden, from an Indo-European root shared by Sanskrit bandh.
    Translate bind to
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    Similar and Opposite Words
    verb
    1. tie or fasten (something) tightly:
      Opposite:
    2. cohere or cause to cohere in a single mass:
      • cause (people) to feel united:
        knit together
        draw together
        yoke together
        Opposite:
      • trim (the edge of a piece of material) with a decorative strip:
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