Online Google Dictionary

bounded 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/bound/,
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bounded, past tense; bounds, 3rd person singular present; bounding, present participle; bounded, past participle;
  1. Form the boundary of; enclose
    • - the ground was bounded by a main road on one side and a meadow on the other
  2. Place within certain limits; restrict
    • - freedom of action is bounded by law

  1. having the limits or boundaries established; "a delimited frontier through the disputed region"
  2. (boundedness) finiteness: the quality of being finite
  3. (bound) confined by bonds; "bound and gagged hostages"
  4. (bound) jump: move forward by leaps and bounds; "The horse bounded across the meadow"; "The child leapt across the puddle"; "Can you jump over the fence?"
  5. (bound) form the boundary of; be contiguous to
  6. (bound) held with another element, substance or material in chemical or physical union
  7. In mathematics, particularly in mathematical logic and set theory, a club set is a subset of a limit ordinal which is closed under the order topology, and is unbounded relative to the limit ordinal. The name club is a contraction of closed and unbounded.
  8. In functional analysis and related areas of mathematics, a set in a topological vector space is called bounded or von Neumann bounded, if every neighborhood of the zero vector can be inflated to include the set. Conversely a set which is not bounded is called unbounded.
  9. (Bound (car)) The Bound was a British 4 wheeled cyclecar made in 1920 by Bound Brothers of Southampton, England.
  10. (Bound (cricket)) In the sport of cricket, the bound is a jump that allows the bowler to transition from the run-up to the back foot contact position. For a chest on bowler not much transition is needed. So, many chest on bowlers have a low, short bound. ...
  11. (Bound (Fringe episode)) This is a list of episodes of the science fiction television series Fringe, which premiered on Fox on September 9, 2008. ...
  12. (Bound (movie)) Bound is a 1996 neo-noir crime thriller film directed by the Wachowski brothers. It is about a woman (Jennifer Tilly) who longs to escape her relationship with her mafioso boyfriend (Joe Pantoliano). ...
  13. Of a set, that it is capable of being included within a ball of finite radius
  14. (bound) A boundary, the border which one must cross in order to enter or leave a territory; a value which is known to be greater or smaller than a given set of values; Obliged (to); Very likely (to); That cannot stand alone as a free word; Constrained by a quantifier
  15. (bound) Refers to several issues of a periodical which are joined together under one cover.
  16. (bound) One of the dignities also known as terms (from the latin - terminus), thought of as delimiting a certain circumstance within a certain confine of life. Often used in life expectancy calculations.
  17. (Bound) A book with a cover of any type, or a periodical that has a cover other than its published wraps.
  18. (Bound) A final state of a book, when all the printed pages are sewn onto boards prior to the gluing of the covering material.
  19. (BOUND) A bounce or jump (2 bounds per possession for advanced players; 3 for beginners)
  20. (BOUND) To dream that you are tied with ropes or to see others bound in this way is an unfortunate omen. To tie others with rope signifies money losses and embarrassment. Being bound by chains indicates you will experience difficulties, but these will eventually be overcome. ...
  21. (Bound) "Where are you bound?" means "where are you going to"; also held, as in wind-bound; prevented from sailing.
  22. (Bound) A line that is properly assigned a WAN IP address and PVC numbers. A line must be bound by both the CLEC and the ISP before the customer will be able to reach the Internet. See also: Unbound
  23. (Bound) A network communication technique whereby a node automatically receives a network variable from a sender node whenever the sender node sends it out. Whenever this condition exists, the node is said to be "bound".
  24. (Bound) Encased with metal bands. Also referring to the destination of a vessel.
  25. (Bound) In a traditional use of this term, a bound form is one which cannot stand alone and be used as an independent word, but rather must be attached to some other morpheme (e.g. negative n't, which has to attach to some auxiliary such as could). ...