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was binding
noun
An item (usually rope, tape, or string) used to hold two or more things together.
Exact(60)
He emphasized that Doubleday knew the appraiser's decision was binding.
Aniskin said that the most difficult part of the process was binding the pages together so they can be turned.
A spokesman for Kansas City Southern said it would press its case that the TFM accord was binding.
She recognized that the Senate would be most unlikely to ratify a human rights treaty that was binding.
However, when he contacted BT he was told that the contract, agreed and recapped over the phone, was binding.
Now his hand, broad and blunt-fingered, travelled in a rotating pattern, as though it held a rope with which he was binding an invisible presence.
He thanked the UN working group for their verdict which he said was "binding under international law".
In less than 10 minutes, Mr. Ford was binding the crates to the tent frame using bungee cords.
Ms. Curiel added that she nearly caused herself an even greater headache by withdrawing her other applications because the Vassar decision was binding.
Although Ms. Khatun's husband repented the next morning, the head cleric of their mosque in Delhi insisted that the divorce was binding.
The Zionists, insisting that partition was binding and anxious about the change in U.S. policy, made a major effort to establish their state.
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