bind
/baɪnd/ (bre, ipa) · /baɪnd/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈbīnd/ (ame, mw)
bind — 動詞
1. to wrap rope, string, or a similar material around something or someone so that
綑綁;綁住
用繩、線等將人或物緊緊綁牢
to wrap rope, string, or a similar material around something or someone so that it stays firmly in place or cannot move.
The kidnappers bound Sami to a wooden chair with thick rope.
綁匪用粗繩把 Sami 綑綁在木椅上。
bind + object + to + noun + with + material
Ancient sailors bound the broken mast with strips of leather.
古代水手會用皮帶綑綁折斷的桅杆。
bind + object + with + material
Wairimu carefully bound the bundle of dry sticks with garden twine.
Wairimu 仔細地用園藝麻繩把那捆乾樹枝綁好。
The prisoners' wrists were bound behind their backs.
犯人們的雙手被綁在背後。
Anya bound the loose pages together with a piece of red string.
Anya 用一條紅繩把鬆散的紙頁綁在一起。
文法句型
bind + object
bind + object + with + noun
bind + object + to + noun
用法筆記
Subject is usually a person; object is something or someone that needs to be held still. Frequently passive in news or formal writing about crimes or accidents.
常見錯誤
2. to wrap cloth or a bandage around a wound or an injured arm, leg, or other body
包紮
用布或繃帶纏繞傷處以保護或固定
to wrap cloth or a bandage around a wound or an injured arm, leg, or other body area to protect or support it.
The nurse gently bound Camille's twisted ankle with a clean white bandage.
護士輕輕地用乾淨的白繃帶幫 Camille 包紮扭傷的腳踝。
bind + injured body part + with + cloth
After the accident, Viraj bound her cut hand with a torn shirt.
事故發生後,Viraj 用撕開的襯衫包紮自己受傷的手。
The soldier bound his bleeding arm and kept walking toward the camp.
那名士兵把流血的手臂包紮起來,繼續走向營地。
The physiotherapist bound Yuki's sprained wrist tightly to keep the joint still.
物理治療師把 Yuki 扭傷的手腕緊緊包紮起來,好讓關節無法亂動。
The doctor bound the boy's head where the stone had hit him.
醫生幫那男孩把被石頭打到的頭包紮好。
文法句型
bind + body part
bind + body part + with + noun
用法筆記
Object is always a wounded or injured body part, or the dressing itself. Distinguish from sense 1: here the purpose is medical care, not restraint.
常見錯誤
3. to attach a thin strip of cloth, leather, or similar material along the edge of
滾邊;包邊
在布料邊緣縫上窄條材料以加固或裝飾
to attach a thin strip of cloth, leather, or similar material along the edge of clothing or fabric so that the edge looks neat or lasts longer.
The tailor bound the jacket cuffs with soft black velvet.
裁縫師用柔軟的黑色天鵝絨幫外套袖口滾邊。
bind + object (clothing edge) + with + material
Her grandmother bound the quilt edges with bright yellow ribbon.
她奶奶用亮黃色的絲帶替棉被包邊。
The collar of the coat was bound in fine red silk.
那件大衣的領子用上等的紅色絲料滾邊。
Amara bound the hem of the skirt to stop it from fraying.
Amara 把裙襬的邊緣縫了滾邊,避免脫線。
文法句型
bind + object + with + material
bind + object + in + material
用法筆記
Object is normally an edge, hem, cuff, or border of fabric or leather goods. Common in sewing, tailoring, and craft contexts; sounds technical in everyday speech.
4. to join loose sheets of paper along one edge and add a cover so that they form a
裝訂
把散頁紙張連同封面合製成書
to join loose sheets of paper along one edge and add a cover so that they form a finished book.
The old workshop in Florence still binds books by hand.
佛羅倫斯那家老工坊至今仍以手工裝訂書本。
bind + object (loose pages → book)
Sami had his thesis bound in dark green leather as a gift to himself.
Sami 把自己的論文裝訂成深綠色皮面,送給自己當禮物。
have + object + bound (causative)
These ancient manuscripts were bound with wooden boards and brass clasps.
這些古老的手稿是用木板和黃銅扣裝訂而成的。
The print shop on the corner can bind your photo album in one hour.
街角那家影印店一個小時就能幫你的相簿裝訂好。
文法句型
bind + object
bind + object + in + material
用法筆記
Often used in the passive or with 'have something bound'. Subject is usually a workshop, shop, or craftsperson; object is a book, manuscript, or report.
常見錯誤
5. in cooking and similar processes, to make small bits of food join into one solid
黏合;凝結
使食材或顆粒結成一團
in cooking and similar processes, to make small bits of food join into one solid lump, or for the bits to join in this way themselves.
Add one beaten egg to bind the meatballs before you fry them.
下鍋油炸前,先加一顆打散的蛋讓肉丸黏合。
bind + object (food mixture) — cooking context
A spoonful of cold water helps bind the pastry into a smooth dough.
加一匙冷水可以幫助酥皮麵團凝結成光滑的麵糰。
The mixture will not bind unless you add a little melted butter.
除非加一點融化的奶油,這個混合物是不會凝結的。
Wairimu stirred the rice until the grains began to bind together.
Wairimu 一直攪拌米飯,直到米粒開始黏合在一起。
Use breadcrumbs to bind the fish cakes so they keep their shape.
用麵包屑讓魚餅黏合,這樣才能保持形狀。
- hold together
phrasal and more common in casual recipe talk
- stick
everyday word; bind is preferred in printed recipes
- set
emphasises becoming firm rather than joining
文法句型
bind + object
bind + object + together
object + binds (intransitive)
用法筆記
Frequently transitive with cooking ingredients (egg, flour, water) as the subject. The intransitive form describes the food itself coming together. Distinguish from sense 6: here the joining is physical and mechanical, not chemical.
6. in chemistry or biology, when one substance joins to another through a chemical
結合;鍵結
化學或生物上兩物質以化學鍵相連
in chemistry or biology, when one substance joins to another through a chemical bond, or when something causes that join to happen.
Iron atoms bind to oxygen to form rust on the metal surface.
鐵原子與氧結合,在金屬表面形成鐵鏽。
bind + to + noun (chemistry pattern)
The drug binds with a specific protein inside the cell.
這種藥物會與細胞內的特定蛋白質結合。
bind + with + noun
Hemoglobin in red blood cells binds oxygen and carries it through the body.
紅血球裡的血紅素會與氧結合,並把氧運送到全身。
These antibodies bind tightly to the virus and stop it from spreading.
這些抗體會緊密結合在病毒上,阻止它擴散。
The new molecule was designed to bind with cancer cells only.
這種新分子被設計成只與癌細胞結合。
文法句型
bind + to + noun
bind + with + noun
bind + object
用法筆記
Most common in scientific writing. Object or prepositional phrase names the partner substance. Distinguish from sense 5: here the joining is at the level of atoms or molecules, not visible bits of food.
7. to bring people closer by giving them a strong shared feeling, loyalty, or exper
凝聚;連結
因共同情感或經歷而連結在一起
to bring people closer by giving them a strong shared feeling, loyalty, or experience that links them as a group.
Years of training together had bound the swim team into a tight family.
多年一起訓練讓游泳隊緊密相連,像一個家。
bind + group + together for shared loyalty
Grief over the flood bound the small village in a way no festival ever could.
對洪水的悲痛讓這個小村子凝聚在一起,是任何節慶都比不上的。
shared experience binding a community
Sami felt that a deep loyalty bound him to his old school friends.
Sami 覺得有一份深厚的情誼把自己和老同學緊緊相連。
What binds these poets is a love for the mountains of northern Taiwan.
把這些詩人凝聚起來的,是對台灣北部山林的熱愛。
The promise the children made under the old oak tree bound them for life.
孩子們在那棵老橡樹下許下的承諾,把他們一輩子緊密相連。
- unite
more general; can be by force or agreement, not only emotion
- connect
weaker; just a link, not the strong shared feeling
- draw together
phrasal; emphasises the process more than the lasting tie
文法句型
bind + somebody + together
bind + somebody + to + somebody
用法筆記
Subject is usually an abstract experience (grief, loyalty, hardship, a memory) rather than a person. Distinguish from sense 8 (OBLIGE), where the subject is typically a contract or duty.
常見錯誤
8. to place someone under a promise, contract, or rule that they must keep, so they
約束;使承擔
因合約或誓言而必須履行某事
to place someone under a promise, contract, or rule that they must keep, so they no longer have a free choice about doing the thing.
The contract binds Wairimu to deliver the paintings before the New Year.
這份合約讓 Wairimu 必須在新年前交出畫作。
bind + somebody + to + infinitive in legal context
By signing the form, Camille was bound to repay the loan within five years.
簽下表格後,Camille 就有義務在五年內還清貸款。
passive: be bound to + infinitive
The treaty binds both governments to share weather data every month.
這項條約使兩國政府必須每月分享天氣資料。
Doctors are bound by an oath to treat any patient who arrives in danger.
醫師受誓言約束,必須救治任何身陷危險的病患。
Her promise to her late father bound her to keep the family farm running.
她對亡父的承諾,讓她不得不繼續經營家裡的農場。
文法句型
bind + somebody + to + do something
be bound by + agreement
用法筆記
Frequently passive ('be bound to', 'be bound by'). Subject is usually a contract, oath, treaty, or promise — not a person giving an order. Distinguish from sense 9 (RESTRICT), which is about limiting what someone can do rather than committing them to do something.
常見錯誤
9. to stop someone from acting freely by holding them to strict rules, laws, or con
束縛;限制
用規則或慣例限制行動自由
to stop someone from acting freely by holding them to strict rules, laws, or conditions that limit their choices.
Old village rules still bind the women here from owning land in their own name.
村裡的舊規矩,至今仍束縛這裡的女性,不能以自己的名字擁有土地。
bind + somebody + from + gerund
Amara felt bound by her job's strict dress code every single morning.
Amara 每天早上都覺得被工作的嚴格服裝規定綁得死死的。
passive: be bound by + rules
The judge's order binds the company to a single supplier for two years.
法官的命令限制這家公司未來兩年只能向同一家供應商採購。
Tradition bound the young prince more tightly than any rope around his wrists.
傳統對年輕王子的束縛,比任何綁在手腕上的繩子都還緊。
Many small farmers feel bound by old debts they can never fully pay off.
許多小農覺得自己被永遠還不完的舊債綁住。
文法句型
bind + somebody + with/by + rules
用法筆記
Often passive ('be bound by'). The thing doing the binding is a rule, law, custom, or condition — not a physical rope (that's sense 1). Distinguish from sense 8 (OBLIGE): sense 8 forces you to do something; sense 9 stops you from doing what you want.
常見錯誤
10. to wrap your chest with tight cloth or a special garment so that your breasts lo
束胸;綁胸
用布或束胸帶把胸部壓平
to wrap your chest with tight cloth or a special garment so that your breasts look flat under your clothes.
Before heading to school, Alex carefully bound their chest with a soft cotton band.
出門上學前,Alex 細心地用一條柔軟的棉布把胸部束平。
bind + (one's) chest with + material
The nurse warned River not to bind for more than eight hours at a time.
護理師提醒 River 一次束胸不要超過八小時。
intransitive use: 'to bind' alone
Many trans teens save for months to buy a real binder instead of binding with bandages.
許多跨性別青少年寧可存好幾個月買正規的束胸衣,也不願用繃帶綁胸。
Sam learned to bind safely after watching a video by a community nurse.
Sam 看完一位社區護理師的影片後,學會怎麼安全地束胸。
文法句型
bind + (one's) chest
用法筆記
Used mainly in trans and non-binary contexts. The object, when present, is usually 'chest' (preferred) rather than 'breasts'. Often intransitive ('how long do you bind?'). Distinguish from sense 1 (TIE), which is about tying any object with rope or string.
常見錯誤
bind — 名詞
1. an awkward problem or tight spot where your choices are blocked, so you cannot e
困境;窘境
進退兩難、難以行動的處境
an awkward problem or tight spot where your choices are blocked, so you cannot easily do what you want or need to do.
Viraj was in a real bind after she lost her wallet at the airport on Sunday night.
Viraj 週日晚上在機場掉了錢包,當時真的陷入困境。
collocation: be in a (real) bind
The sudden rent increase put the Chen family in a bind for several months.
突然的房租調漲讓 Chen 一家有好幾個月都處於窘境。
pattern: put someone in a bind
Sami found himself in a bind when both his sisters needed the car on Friday.
週五兩個妹妹都需要用車,Sami 因此陷入兩難。
Calling in sick would have left the small bakery in a serious bind that morning.
如果他那天早上請病假,那家小麵包店就會陷入嚴重困境。
Could you lend me twenty dollars until Tuesday? I'm in a bit of a bind.
可以借我二十美元到星期二嗎?我現在有點窘迫。
- predicament
more formal; emphasises a difficult choice
- fix
informal, very close in meaning; slightly less urgent feel
- jam
informal; often suggests trouble of one's own making
- tight spot
informal; stresses lack of room to manoeuvre
文法句型
be in a bind
put someone in a bind
用法筆記
Almost always appears as 'in a bind' or 'put someone in a bind'. Rarely used as a bare noun without 'a' or a determiner, and seldom appears in plural.