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"bound to a" is a grammatically correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It can be used to indicate that something is attached or connected to another thing, or that it is destined or obligated to be a certain way. Example: The key was bound to a string that she wore around her neck at all times.
Exact(58)
Every look, every movement bound to a larger purpose.
Another man, dreadlocked and wide-eyed, is bound to a stretcher outside an office.
Harding's subject is consciousness rooted in a contemporary moment but bound to a Puritan past.
In a live lobster the molecules of astaxanthin are bound to a protein molecule.
On the cover of one sequel, she appears gagged and bound to a tree.
Her son, Richard, had been suffocated and bound to a banister.
"You do need a buyer that is flexible" and not bound to a specific time frame.
I have known one bound to a bed by wrist and ankle.
Thus in water the ion H3O+ consists of a proton bound to a water molecule.
The efflux mechanism is a molecule bound to a bacterium's outer membrane.
is bound to a non-CML namespace.
More suggestions(25)
bound to a reliable
bound to a document
bound to a particular place
bound to an underlying
bind to a major
binds to a homologous
bound to an agricultural
bound to a clock
bound to a peptidomimetic
bound to a particular location
bound to a frame
bound to a biotin
binds to a section
bound to a collagen
bound to an electropolymerized
binds to an obligate
bound to a sequence
bound to a part
bound to a vast
bounded to a particular
bound to a lower
bound to a major
bound to a Ca
bound to a security
bind to a heterogeneous
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.
Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com