bind
verb /baɪnd/
/baɪnd/
Verb Forms
Idioms Phrasal Verbspresent simple I / you / we / they bind | /baɪnd/ /baɪnd/ |
he / she / it binds | /baɪndz/ /baɪndz/ |
past simple bound | /baʊnd/ /baʊnd/ |
past participle bound | /baʊnd/ /baʊnd/ |
-ing form binding | /ˈbaɪndɪŋ/ /ˈbaɪndɪŋ/ |
- bind somebody/something to something She was bound to a chair.
- bind somebody/something together They bound his hands together.
- bind somebody/something He was left bound and gagged (= tied up and with a piece of cloth tied over his mouth).
Extra Examples- The sails are bound to the mast with cord.
- She found herself bound hand and foot.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- tightly
- loosely
- together
- …
- to
- with
- bind and gag somebody
- bind somebody hand and foot
- [transitive] bind something (up) (formal) to tie a long thin piece of cloth around something
- She bound up his wounds.
- bind A (and B) (together) Organizations such as schools and clubs bind a community together.
- bind A to B She thought that having his child would bind him to her forever.
- [transitive, usually passive] to force somebody to do something by making them promise to do it or by making it their duty to do it
- bind somebody (to something) He had been bound to secrecy (= made to promise not to tell people about something).
- bind somebody to do something The agreement binds her to repay the debt within six months.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- contractually
- legally
- morally
- …
- [intransitive, transitive] to stick together or to make things stick together in a solid mass
- bind (together) Add an egg yolk to make the mixture bind.
- bind something (together) Add an egg yolk to bind the mixture together.
- [transitive, usually passive] bind something (in something) to fasten the pages of a book together and put them inside a cover
- two volumes bound in leather
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryphrases- be beautifully bound
- be handsomely bound
- be richly bound
- …
- [transitive, often passive] bind something (with something) to sew a piece of material to the edge of something to decorate it or to make it stronger
- The blankets were bound with satin.
Wordfinder- baste
- bind
- embroidery
- hem
- lining
- seam
- sew
- stitch
- tack
- thread
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- contractually
- legally
- morally
- …
tie with rope/cloth
form united group
make somebody do something
stick together
book
sew edge
Word OriginOld English bindan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch and German binden, from an Indo-European root shared by Sanskrit bandh.
Idioms
bind/tie somebody hand and foot
- to tie somebody’s hands and feet together so that they cannot move or escape
- to prevent somebody from doing what they want by creating rules, limits, etc.