define bound - Search
  1. Dictionary

    bound
    [bound]
    verb
    bound (verb) · bounds (third person present) · bounded (past tense) · bounded (past participle) · bounding (present participle)
    1. walk or run with leaping strides:
      "Louis came bounding down the stairs" · "the dog bounded up to him"
      • (of an object, typically a round one) rebound from a surface:
        "bullets bounded off the veranda"
    noun
    bound (noun) · bounds (plural noun)
    1. a leaping movement upward:
      "I went up the steps in two effortless bounds"
    Origin
    early 16th century (as a noun): from French bond (noun), bondir (verb) ‘resound’, later ‘rebound’, from late Latin bombitare, from Latin bombus ‘humming’.
    bound
    [bound]
    noun
    (bounds)
    bounds (plural noun) · bound (noun)
    1. a territorial limit; a boundary:
      "the ancient bounds of the forest"
      • a limitation or restriction on feeling or action:
        "it is not beyond the bounds of possibility that the issue could arise again" · "enthusiasm to join the union knew no bounds"
      • technical
        a limiting value:
        "an upper bound on each modulus"
    verb
    (be bounded)
    bound (verb) · bounds (third person present) · bounded (past tense) · bounded (past participle) · bounding (present participle)
    1. form the boundary of; enclose:
      "the ground was bounded by a main road on one side and a meadow on the other"
      • place within certain limits; restrict:
        "freedom of action is bounded by law"
    Origin
    Middle English (in the senses ‘landmark’ and ‘borderland’): from Old French bodne, from medieval Latin bodina, earlier butina, of unknown ultimate origin.
    bound
    [bound]
    adjective
    bound (adjective)
    1. going or ready to go toward a specified place:
      "the three moon-bound astronauts" · "trains bound for Chicago"
      • destined or likely to have a specified experience:
        "they were bound for disaster"
    Origin
    Middle English boun (in the sense ‘ready, dressed’), from Old Norse búinn, past participle of búa ‘get ready’; the final -d is euphonic, or influenced by bound.
    bound
    [bound]
    verb
    bound (past tense)
    1. past and past participle of bind
    adjective
    bound (adjective)
    1. certain to do or have something:
      "there is bound to be a change of plan"
      • obliged by law, circumstances, or duty to do something:
        "I'm bound to do what I can to help Sam" · "I'm bound to say that I'm not sure"
    2. restricted or confined to a specified place:
      "his job kept him city-bound"
      • prevented from operating normally by the specified conditions:
        "blizzard-bound Boston"
    3. (of a book) having a specified binding:
      "fine leather-bound books"
    4. linguistics
      (of a morpheme) unable to occur alone, e.g., dis- in dismount.
    5. constipated.
    bind
    [bīnd]
    verb
    bound (past tense) · bound (past 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).
    Origin
    Old English bindan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch and German binden, from an Indo-European root shared by Sanskrit bandh.
    Translate bound to
    No translation found.
    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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    2. People also ask
      What does bound means?bound - headed or intending to head in a certain direction; often used as a combining form as in `college-bound students'; "children bound for school"; "a flight destined for New York" destined
      What is the meaning of bound?boundsThe territory on, within, or near limiting lines: the bounds of the kingdom. v.bound·ed, bound·ing, bounds. v.tr. 1. To set a limit to; confine: a high wall that bounded the prison yard; lives that were bounded by poverty.
      What is another word for bound?adj. obligated; destined verb jump, bounce verb restrict synonyms for bound Compare Synonyms constrained enslaved obligated restrained apprenticed articled bent coerced compelled contracted doomed driven fated firm forced impelled indentured intent made necessitated obliged pledged pressed required urged bounden certain duty-bound
      What is the definition of bound?bound - (usually followed by `to') governed by fate; "bound to happen"; "an old house destined to be demolished"; "he is destined to be famous" destined sure , certain - certain to occur; destined or inevitable; "he was certain to fail"; "his fate is certain"; "In this life nothing is certain but death and taxes"- Benjamin Franklin; "he faced certain death"; "sudden but sure regret"; "he is sure to win"
       
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