释义 |
inbind, v.|ɪnˈbaɪnd| [f. in-1 + bind v.] To bind within (usu. in pass. and fig.); to bind within a book or manuscript (cf. inbound a.2).
1888Ruskin Præterita (1889) III. i. 32 The most stern practical precept of that doctrine still holding me,—it is curiously inbound with all the rest,—was the Sabbath keeping. 1913D. H. Lawrence Sons & Lovers x. 316 He had never been very closely inbound into the family. 1932Ampleforth Jrnl. Spring 133 A transcription of the fragment inbound in the Sarum Missal in the monastery library. |