binden

Etymology
From, from , from , from , from.

Verb

 * 1)  To tie.
 * 2)  To wrap.
 * 3)  To bind (generally, legally/contractually).
 * 4)  To bind, to thicken (of food).

Etymology
From, from , from , from , from. Cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Verb

 * 1)  to bind, to tie, to fasten something by means of a string etc.
 * 2)  to tie, to fasten a string etc.
 * 3)  to oblige, commit, bind
 * 4)  to commit oneself, make a commitment
 * 5)  to make congeal, thicken, set, bond
 * 6)  to capture; to absorb
 * 7)  to congeal, thicken, set, bond
 * 8)  to make sandhi, crasis, liaison
 * 1)  to oblige, commit, bind
 * 2)  to commit oneself, make a commitment
 * 3)  to make congeal, thicken, set, bond
 * 4)  to capture; to absorb
 * 5)  to congeal, thicken, set, bond
 * 6)  to make sandhi, crasis, liaison
 * 1)  to congeal, thicken, set, bond
 * 2)  to make sandhi, crasis, liaison

Etymology
From, from , from , from.

Verb

 * 1) To bind,  tie.
 * 2) To tie up.
 * 3) To bind (to an obligation).

Etymology
From, from , from ; equivalent to.

Verb

 * 1) To bind, fasten; to make a knot or fastening.
 * 2) To wrap; to enclose in wrapping.
 * 3) To secure, strengthen; to make strong:
 * 4) To tie up; to strengthen with a knot.
 * 5) To connect or link especially by binding:
 * 6)  To remember; to keep one's mental connection secure.
 * 7)  To strengthen or provide proof for an argument.
 * 8) To take away one's agency; to enthrall:
 * 9) To restrain a captive; to jail.
 * 10) To enslave, subordinate, or force.
 * 11) To enrapture or captivate.
 * 12)  To take into apprenticeship or training.
 * 13) To enter into a socially binding obligation or agreement:
 * 14) To enter into a marital relationship; to marry.
 * 15)  To copulate; to have sex.
 * 16) To force or compel to perform an action:
 * 17) To obligate; to be forced by societal pressure.
 * 18) To force (into) a socially binding obligation or agreement.
 * 19) To mete out or proscribe penalties.
 * 20) To combine; to join; to make one.
 * 21) To decorate or adorn; to add ornaments on.
 * 22) To evacuate; to induce constipation.
 * 23) To unify or join; to make one.
 * 24) To enclose or surround; to fold as to completely conceal.
 * 25)  To  cohere; to enjoin with itself.
 * 26)  To end or finish; to wrap up for the sense, compare Modern English

Usage notes
This verb inherited a system of alternations between the past singular stem vowel ( or in Middle English) and the past plural and participle stem vowel ( in Middle English) from Old English and ultimately Proto-Germanic. In the later Middle English period, the vowel of the past plural tended to replace that of the singular, though occasionally the singular form was levelled to the plural instead. The Modern English past tense demonstrates the completion of this levelling.

Etymology
, from, from. Cognate with 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬.

Verb

 * 1) to bind

Etymology
From, from , from.

Verb

 * 1) To bind.