Synonym: fasten, oblige, require, restrain, tie, weld, wrap. Antonym: loose, undo, unfasten, untie. Similar words: cabin, ebbing, binary, combine, cabinet, turbine, bombing, hobbing. Meaning: [baɪnd] n. something that hinders as if with bonds. v. 1. stick to firmly 2. create social or emotional ties 3. make fast; tie or secure, with or as if with a rope 4. wrap around with something so as to cover or enclose 5. secure with or as if with ropes 6. bind by an obligation; cause to be indebted 7. form a chemical bond with 8. provide with a binding 9. fasten or secure with a rope, string, or cord 10. cause to be constipated.
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91 To his credit, he did feel terrible about the bind I was in and he did as much as he could.
92 Mix in the orange juice to bind. Roll out the pastry to an oblong measuring 8 x 12 inch.
93 Article 34 of the Vienna Convention applies to itself so that like other treaties it can not bind third parties.
94 The scope of that Article was to bind member States to treaties concluded by the organisation, not contracts under municipal law.
95 Vicarious performance of a personal contract will not discharge the vendor nor bind the customer.
96 The ties that bind us are stronger than the occasional stresses that separate us. Colin Powell
97 Knit two rows and bind off for a round neck or cast off for a V-neck.
98 If you bind too strongly to things and people, when they disappear, it will not go maybe even a part of ourselves? Richard Bach
99 It takes guts to break away from the ties that bind you.
100 We propose a novel variation, namely that proteoglycans on an endothelial cell can bind and present cytokines to passing leukocytes.
101 And so, Your Honor, if you bind my client over for trial to the district court, I will understand.
102 In a month King was marching again, and this time he had Daley worried and in a politically dangerous bind.
103 Exactly the same double bind is encountered in any theorization of racial difference.
104 In my particular case, the airline was caught in a bind.
105 It also occurs in alcoholism, diabetic ketoacidosis, and in patients taking antacids which bind phosphate in the gut.
106 Thus is the reporter put in a classic double bind.
107 Small sea organisms bind these marine minerals into their body structures, which then fall to the ocean floor upon their death.
108 Add sufficient fromage frais to bind and half the chopped coriander or tarragon.
109 The nation, on those subjects on which it can act, must necessarily bind its component parts.
110 Before a virus can infect an animal cell it must first bind to specific receptor molecules embedded in the cell membrane.
111 When he was around I felt no compulsion to bind myself to people in this terrible, demanding way. Sentencedict.com
112 Add sufficient fromage frais to bind and half the chopped coriander or tarragon. Season with salt and pepper.
113 We were to take the bind rajah to his wedding in style.
114 As shown in Fig. 3, both oligonucleotides were able to bind F9 proteins and to produce retarded complexes.
115 This had led to a lengthy series of negotiations over the sort of contracts which should bind printers in his new plant.
116 Unexpectedly weak earning from Motorola Inc. coupled with rising government bind yields weighed on stocks, caused widespread losses.
117 He says the residue is rocket fuel, but investigators say it actually is a glue used to bind airplane seats.
118 The word bond comes from the same root as bind, for the corporation binds it-self to make the specified payments.
119 And the only reason why evolution would bind relationships together is if they served a utilitarian purpose.
120 Our data indicate that cytokines are among the many proteins that bind to endothelial surfaces in a GAG-dependent fashion.