tie or fasten (something) tightly together
they bound her hands and feet
the logs were bound together with ropes
cause (people) to feel united
it's music that has bound us together
we have many ties that bind us—historical, cultural, and economical
impose a legal or contractual obligation on
a party who signs a document will normally be bound by its terms
the council should seek to bind the parties to a programme of environmental improvements
fix together and enclose (the pages of a book) in a cover
a small, fat volume, bound in red morocco
(of a quantifier) be applied to (a given variable) so that the variable falls within its scope. For example, in an expression of the form ‘For every x, if x is a dog, x is an animal’, the universal quantifier is binding the variable x
(of a rule or set of grammatical conditions) determine the relationship between (coreferential noun phrases)
a problematical situation
he is in a bind that gets worse with every passing minute
a statutory constraint
the moral bind of the law