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Discover Ludwig"chained by" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you want to express that someone or something is bound or connected to something else, either literally or figuratively. For example: "She felt chained by her fear of failure."
Exact(60)
After the beating, Byrd was chained by the ankles to the back of Berry's pickup.
Voters are no longer chained by their social history or their economic circumstances to immutable allegiances.
Unless this changes, the Timorese will remain, as the UNDP puts it, politically free but chained by poverty.
Footage from the documentary shows women shackled and chained by their hands and feet as they stand trial.
The Goldfinch sits on its perch in a Dutch house, chained by the foot, a pet with nowhere to go.
"They were always chained by their feet to a rail or bar and blindfolded for long periods".
Asmatullah Saba has been chained by the ankle in a concrete compound of central Kandahar for the last 35 years.
They are about child murder, cannibalism, starvation, deformity, desperate human creatures cast into the form of beasts, or chained by spells, or immured alive in thorns.
Each operation may be chained by mirrors and each operation may be performed on either the X or Y position independently.
Mr. Byrd, who was severely beaten first, was chained by his ankles to the bumper of the truck and dragged until his body came apart.
He kept her there for 16 days, and made her stay, chained by the neck, in a locked wooden box suspended above the ground.
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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