TIED vs BOUND: NOUN
- N/A
- The external or limiting line, either real or imaginary, of any object or space; that which limits or restrains, or within which something is limited or restrained; limit; confine; extent; boundary.
- A limited portion or piece of land, enjoyed by the owner of it in respect of tin only, and by virtue of an ancient prescription or liberty for encouragement to the tinners.
- Plural The territory included within boundarylines; domain.
- That which limits or circumscribes; an external or limiting line; hence, that which keeps in or restrains; limit; confine: as, the love of money knows no bounds.
- In ordnance, the path of a shot between two grazes: generally applied to the horizontal distance passed over by the shot between the points of impact.
- A leap onward or upward; a jump; a rebound.
- A leap; a jump.
- A rebound; a bounce.
- A boundary; a limit.
- The territory on, within, or near limiting lines.
- The line or plane indicating the limit or extent of something
- A line determining the limits of an area
- A light springing movement upwards or forwards
TIED vs BOUND: ADJECTIVE
- Of the score in a contest
- That resulted in a tie.
- Bound together by or as if by a strong rope; especially as by a bond of affection
- Connected.
- Closed with a lace
- Bound or secured closely
- Fastened with strings or cords
- Being under legal or moral obligation.
- Equipped with a cover or binding.
- Predetermined; certain.
- Confined by bonds; tied.
- Headed or intending to head in a specified direction.
- Being a form, especially a morpheme, that cannot stand as an independent word, such as a prefix or suffix.
- Held with another element, substance or material in chemical or physical union
- Bound by contract
- Covered or wrapped with a bandage
- Secured with a cover or binding; often used as a combining form
- Confined by bonds
- Bound by an oath
- Headed or intending to head in a certain direction; often used as a combining form as in `college-bound students'
- Determined; resolved.
- Constipated.
TIED vs BOUND: VERB
- Simple past tense and past participle of tie.
- Spring back; spring away from an impact
- Place limits on (extent or access)
- Move forward by leaps and bounds
- Form the boundary of; be contiguous to
TIED vs BOUND: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To identify the boundaries of; demarcate.
- To constitute the boundary or limit of.
- To set a limit to; confine.
- To border on another place, state, or country.
- To bounce; rebound.
- To progress by forward leaps or springs.
- To leap forward or upward; spring.
TIED vs BOUND: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- Hence Obliged by moral, legal, or compellable ties; under obligation or compulsion.
- Confined; restrained; restricted; held firmly.
- Hence Made fast by other than physical bonds.
- Made fast by a band, tie, or bond; specifically, in fetters or chains; in the condition of a prisoner.
- Prepared; ready; hence, going or intending to go; destined: with to or for: as, I am bound for London; the ship is bound for the Mediterranean.
- To lead; go.
- To name the boundaries of: as, to bound the State of New York.
- Certain; sure.
- To serve as a limit to; constitute the extent of; restrain in amount, degree, etc.: as, to bound our wishes by our means.
- To confine within fixed limits; restrain by limitation.
- To cause to rebound: as, to bound a ball.
- To cause to leap.
- To rebound, as an elastic ball.
- To leap; jump; spring; move by leaps.
- A light, self-propelled movement upwards or forwards
- The greatest possible degree of something
- To form or constitute the boundary of; serve as a bound or limit to: as, the Pacific ocean bounds the United States on the west.
- Secured with a cover or binding
- Spring away from an impact
- Spring back
- Be contiguous to
- Form the boundary of
- Confined in the bowels
- Place limits on (extent or amount or access)
- (usually followed by `to') governed by fate
- Having all the affections centered in; entirely devoted to.
- Provided with binding or a cover: said of books, etc.: as, bound volumes can be obtained in exchange for separate parts; bound in leather.
- Often used as a combining form
- Pregnant: said of a woman.
- Constipated in the bowels; costive.
- In entomology, attached by the posterior extremity to a perpendicular object, and supported in an upright position against it, by a silken thread passing across the thorax, as the chrysalides of certain Lepidoptera.
- Determined; resolved: as, he is bound to do it.
- (idiom) (out of bounds) In such a way as to violate or exceed acceptable rules or standards, as of decency:
- (idiom) (out of bounds) Outside the boundary of a playing field or court and therefore not in play or legal.
- (idiom) (in/within) Within the boundary of a playing field or court and therefore in play or legal.
TIED vs BOUND: RELATED WORDS
- Hooked, Pegged, Combined, Intertwined, Linked, Connected, Evened, United, Even, Equal, Trussed, Bound, Fastened, Laced, Knotted
- Certain, Sure, Pinioned, Constrained, Indentured, Obligated, Chained, Tied, Enchained, Fettered, Trussed, Compelled, Tethered, Shackled, Destined
TIED vs BOUND: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Hooked, Pegged, Combined, Intertwined, Linked, Connected, Evened, United, Even, Equal, Trussed, Bound, Fastened, Laced, Knotted
- Certain, Sure, Pinioned, Constrained, Indentured, Obligated, Chained, Tied, Enchained, Fettered, Trussed, Compelled, Tethered, Shackled, Destined
TIED vs BOUND: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Georgia tied a school record with eight sacks.
- It adds the number of tied rows to the tied rank to calculate the next rank.
- The top portion of the tree had a cable attached to it that was tied or was being tied to a backhoe.
- Hand tied hair extensions are lengths of loose hair that are tied by hand into wefts.
- In Bangladesh, nutrition is inextricably tied to food availability, which is in turn tied to environmental crises such as flooding.
- Intermediate goods tied up capital, and storage of physical inventory tied up precious space, and required staff and equipment to move material on site.
- Not only had his partner tied the dogs up, but he had tied them, after the Indian fashion, with sticks.
- For example, we have contracts tied to measurable medical outcomes and contracts tied to offsets of other expenditures.
- If there are tied values, assign to each tied value the average of the ranks that would have been assigned without ties.
- These can be tied to the land or tied to an entity.
- Like static methods class methods are not bound to instances, but unlike static methods class methods are bound to a class.
- That is, data that have a lower bound are often skewed right while datathat have an upper bound are often skewed left.
- The upper bound of one record must be the lower bound of the next record.
- Copper bound to albumin or histidine is more likely to be reduced and exchanged, whereas copper is tightly bound to ceruloplasmin.
- United States that is not bound by the privacy safeguards that Microsoft is bound by.
- Free Versus Bound The first basic characteristic of a morpheme is whether it is free or bound.
- Compound and Bound Root Verbs The following are examples of complex verb compounds and bound root words.
- IP Bound Theoretical bound on the objective for IP models.
- Where data ranges appear to overlap, each range includes its lower bound and excludes its upper bound.
- The superior court was bound to apply Tracy, and this Court is likewise bound.
TIED vs BOUND: QUESTIONS
- Should medical aesthetics pay be tied to performance?
- Should corporate philanthropy be tied to the business?
- Which sacred thread is tied during Varalakshmi Puja?
- What is surrogacy after tubal ligation (tubes tied)?
- How are production targets tied to safety performance?
- Do midstream stocks have escalators tied to inflation?
- How are executive pay structures tied to performance?
- Should social networks be tied to offline identity?
- Is time-space synesthesia tied to hyperthymic memory?
- Should qualifier be tied to implementation details?
- Is metoclopramide extensively bound to plasma proteins?
- Is adventure necessary for Overland Bound business?
- Is transdisciplinary teaching and learning culture bound?
- Are L-galactonolactone oxidases membrane-bound enzymes?
- Are intention and intentional action bound together?
- Which statement correctly characterizes bound ribosomes?
- What is the lower bound and upper bound of the graph?
- Is there a contradiction between midpoint error bound and trapezoidal error bound?
- Why did Mumbai-bound Gorakhpur-bound train come to a halt?
- What is the lower bound and upper bound of a rectangle?