- Bound | Schedules, Scores, News, Rosters, Stats for the Iowa High . . .
Schedules, scores, news, rosters, stats for the Iowa High School sports
- BOUND Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of BOUND is fastened by or as if by a band : confined —often used in combination How to use bound in a sentence
- BOUND | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
The company is bound by a special agreement to involve the union in important decisions The judge who presided over the trial told the panel's members they were not bound to accept that ruling
- BOUND - Definition Translations | Collins English Dictionary
If you say that something is bound to happen, you mean that you are sure it will happen, because it is a natural consequence of something that is already known or exists
- Bound - definition of bound by The Free Dictionary
1 in bonds or chains; tied with or as if with a rope: a bound prisoner 2 (in combination) restricted; confined: housebound; fogbound 3 (postpositive; foll by an infinitive) destined; sure; certain: it's bound to happen
- bound - WordReference. com Dictionary of English
to place under obligation or compulsion (usually used passively): We are bound by good sense to obey the country's laws Law to put under legal obligation, as to keep the peace or appear as a witness (often fol by over): This action binds them to keep the peace
- bound - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
(mathematics, logic, of a variable) Constrained by a quantifier (dated) Constipated; costive Confined or restricted to a certain place Unable to move in certain conditions
- Bound - Definition, Meaning, Synonyms Etymology - Better Words
Over time, 'bound' came to describe something that is tied or linked, and it later extended its meaning to convey the idea of being obligated or constrained by a connection or relationship
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