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Перевод: bind
[существительное] лигатура ; [глагол] вязать; связывать; связать; привязывать; перевязывать; повязывать; переплетать; обшивать; затвердевать; вызывать запор; обязывать; обязать; скреплять; прикручивать; оковывать; ограничивать; зажимать; задерживать; жаловаться
Тезаурус:
- This region of dystrophin is known to bind actin in vitro and computer analysis identified two actinin-type actin-binding motifs at amino-acid positions 33-;42 and 107-;131 in DRP.
- The two remaining types bind to the surface of the cube.
- About to 1 teaspoonful of fine oatmeal to bind.
- "I don't like making men redundant," he said, "but we're caught in a double bind.
- A recruiting sergeant wore as a badge of office a plume of coloured ribbons in his shako; when a young man had been persuaded to enlist he was handed a shilling to bind the contract.
- Also, natural fibre such as bran products tend to bind to calcium, making it difficult for the body to use the calcium, making supplements more necessary than ever.
- Didn't I bind myself to Jordan for that reason? he thought.
- It got to be a bloody bind.
- TIES THAT BIND The adoption of electronic data interchange looks set to forge closer relationships between customers and suppliers during the 1990s
- The rules of a society and the trusts which bind its property will, in many cases, fetter its freedom of action and the application of its property, in a way very similar to the restrictions which the doctrine of ultra vires imposes on a corporation; and in the case of some unincorporated societies, such as registered Trade Unions and Friendly Societies, which have received a peculiar status by Statute, the rule of ultra vires has been held directly applicable.
- However, I would not claim that these displays have any culturally mediated symbolic meaning, as do the myths and rituals which bind human groups.
- These are organic molecules with an unusual crown-shaped arrangement of carbon and oxygen atoms (called "crown" ethers), that allows them to bind atoms of sodium and potassium.
- The sacred canopy of a still Christian England is not just a question of shared beliefs and a common moral perspective: it is an involvement in communal, religious and social rituals which bind people together.
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