bound ●●●●●


تلفظ آنلاینOxford 5000 vocabulary |B2|SPEAKING vocabularyWRITING vocabulary

bound /baʊnd/
bound adjective [no comparative]
bound verb
bound noun

Irregular Forms: ⇒ {bind}

مسلم، به احتمال زیاد
ملتزم شده، خیز به خیز رفتن، محدود کردن مقید کردن، حد، سرحد، جست وخیز، محدودکردن، تعیین کردن، هم مرز بودن، مجاوربودن، مشرف بودن، آماده رفتن، عازم رفتن، مهیا، موجود، مقید، موظف، کران، کامپیوتر: آنچه که کارائی یک سیستم را محدود می کند، قانون فقه: ملزم، موظف، روانشناسی: مقید، علوم نظامی: بستن
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مهندسی صنایع: کران، حد، مرزالکترونیک: انچه که کارایی یک سیستم را محدود می کند، کامپیوتر: ملزم، فقهی: ملتزم شده، موظف، حقوق: خیز به خیز رفتن، خیز، محدود کردن مقید کردن، بستن، علوم نظامی: مقید، روانشناسیvt.and vi. (: ،:) n. حد، مرز، محدود، سرحد، خیز، جست وخیز، محدودکردن، تعیین کردن، هم مرز بودن، مجاوربودن، مشرف بودن on (یا) with، جهیدن، :) adj. (اماده رفتن، عازم رفتن، مهیا، موجود، مقید، موظف، کرانکامپیوتر: کرانه-محدودهکامپیوتر: محدوده

[TahlilGaran] Persian Dictionary

bound
(Informal)
[adjective]
Synonyms:
- tied, cased, fastened, fixed, pinioned, secured, tied up
- certain, destined, doomed, fated, sure
- obliged, beholden, committed, compelled, constrained, duty-bound, forced, pledged, required
————————
[verb]
limit, confine, demarcate, encircle, enclose, hem in, restrain, restrict, surround
————————
[noun]
leap, bob, bounce, gambol, hurdle, jump, skip, spring, vault
Contrasted words: free, freed
Related Words: contracted, enslaved

[TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary

I. bound1 /baʊnd/
the past tense and past participle of bind

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

II. bound2 S2 W3 adjective [no comparative]
[Sense 1-3, 5-11: Date: 1300-1400; Origin: From the past participle of bind1]
[Sense 4: Date: 1500-1600; Language: Old Norse; Origin: buinn, past participle of bua 'to live in a place, prepare'; probably influenced by the past participle bound]

1. LIKELY be bound to to be very likely to do or feel a particular thing:
Don’t lie to her. She’s bound to find out.
it is bound to be (=used to say that something should have been expected)
‘It’s hot!’ ‘Well, it was bound to be – I just took it out of the oven.’
When you are dealing with so many patients, mistakes are bound to happen.

REGISTER
Bound to is used mainly in spoken English. In written English, people usually use certain to, it is inevitable that instead:
Mistakes are bound to happen.It is inevitable that mistakes will happen.

2. LAW/AGREEMENT be bound (by something) to be forced to do what a law or agreement says you must do ⇒ binding
bound (by something) to do something
The Foundation is bound by the treaty to help any nation that requests aid.
You are legally bound to report the accident.

3. DUTYbe/feel bound to do something to feel that you ought to do something, because it is morally right or your duty to do it:
Ian felt bound to tell Joanna the truth.
Well, I’m bound to say (=I feel I ought to say), I think you’re taking a huge risk.
be duty bound/honour bound to do something
A son is duty bound to look after his mother.

4. TRAVELLING TOWARDSbound for London/Mexico etc (also London-bound/Mexico-bound etc) travelling towards a particular place or in a particular direction:
a plane bound for Somalia
We tried to get seats on a Rome-bound flight.
homeward-bound (=travelling towards home) commuters
northbound/southbound/eastbound/westbound
All eastbound trains have been cancelled due to faulty signals.

5. RELATIONSHIP be bound (together) by something if two people or groups are bound together by something, they share a particular experience or situation that causes them to have a relationship ⇒ unite:
The two nations were bound together by a common history.

6. be bound up in something to be very involved in something, so that you cannot think about anything else:
He was too bound up in his own problems to listen to mine.

7. be bound up with something to be very closely connected with a particular problem or situation:
Mark’s problems are all bound up with his mother’s death when he was ten.
The people of Transkei began to realize that their future was inseparably bound up with that of South Africa.

8. snow-bound/strike-bound/tradition-bound etc controlled or limited by something, so that you cannot do what you want or what other people want you to:
a fog-bound airport
people who are wheelchair-bound
a desk-bound sergeant (=having to work in an office, instead of doing a more active job)

9. a bound book is covered on the outside with paper, leather etc ⇒ bind
bound in
a Bible bound in leather
a leather-bound volume of Shakespeare’s plays

10. I’ll be bound old-fashioned used when you are very sure that what you have just said is true:
He had good reasons for doing that, I’ll be bound.

11. bound and determined American English very determined to do or achieve something, especially something difficult:
Klein is bound and determined to win at least five races this year.

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

III. bound3 verb
[Sense 1: Date: 1500-1600; Language: Old French; Origin: bondir, from Vulgar Latin bombitire 'to hum', from Latin bombus; bomb1]
[Sense 2: Date: 1500-1600; Origin: bound4(1)]

1. [intransitive always + adverb/preposition] to run with a lot of energy, because you are happy, excited, or frightened
bound up/towards/across etc
Suddenly a huge dog came bounding towards me.

2. be bounded by something if a country or area of land is bounded by something such as a wall, river etc, it has the wall etc at its edge ⇒ boundary:
a yard bounded by a wooden fence
The US is bounded in the north by Canada and in the south by Mexico.

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

IV. bound4 noun
[Sense 1-2, 4-5: Date: 1300-1400; Language: Old French; Origin: bodne, from Medieval Latin bodina]
[Sense 3, 6: Date: 1500-1600; Language: Old French; Origin: bond, from bondir; bound3(2)]

1. bounds [plural]
a) the limits of what is possible or acceptable
within the bounds of something
We are here to make sure that the police operate within the bounds of the law.
be/go beyond the bounds of credibility/reason/decency etc
The humor in the movie sometimes goes beyond the bounds of good taste.
be within/beyond the bounds of possibility (=be possible/not possible)
It was not beyond the bounds of possibility that they could meet again.
b) old-fashioned the edges of a town, city etc

2. out of bounds if a place is out of bounds, you are not allowed to go there Synonym : off-limits American English
out of bounds to/for
The path by the railway line is officially out of bounds to both cyclists and walkers.

3. by leaps and bounds/in leaps and bounds British English if someone or something increases, develops etc by leaps and bounds, they increase etc very quickly:
Julie’s reading is improving in leaps and bounds.

4. know no bounds formal if someone’s honesty, kindness etc knows no bounds, they are extremely honest etc

5. in bounds/out of bounds inside or outside the legal playing area in a sport such as American football or basketball

6. [countable] a long or high jump made with a lot of energy

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

bound
adj.
I. bound to do sth certain to do sth
VERBS be, seem
ADV. almost These problems were almost bound to arise.

[TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary

bound
II. bound (to do sth): obliged to do sth
VERBS be, feel | become | remain | hold sb The president said the country could not be held bound by a treaty signed by the previous regime.
ADJ. absolutely | irrevocably | by law, contractually, legally Officials are bound by law to investigate any possible fraud. He was legally bound to report them to the authorities.
(in) honour, in duty (also duty-bound), morally I felt in duty bound to report the incident.
PREP. by We are legally bound by this decision.

[TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary

bound
III. travelling in a particular direction
VERBS be
ADV. homeward, outward
PREP. for tourists who are bound for Europe

[TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary

bound
IV. bound up: closely connected
VERBS be | become
ADV. closely, intimately | inevitably, inextricably | intrinsically | together A person's name and their sense of their own identity are often closely bound up together.
PREP. with From that moment my life became inextricably bound up with hers.

[TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary

bound
̈ɪbaund
See: bind , by leaps and bounds , out of bounds , within bounds

[TahlilGaran] English Idioms Dictionary


TahlilGaran Online Dictionary ver 18.0
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TahlilGaran : دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی bound ) | علیرضا معتمد , دیکشنری تحلیلگران , وب اپلیکیشن , تحلیلگران , دیکشنری , آنلاین , آیفون , IOS , آموزش مجازی 4.1 : 2134
4.1دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی bound )
دیکشنری تحلیلگران (وب اپلیکیشن، ویژه کاربران آیفون، IOS) | دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی bound ) | موسس و مدیر مسئول :