Meaning BIND
What does BIND mean? Here you find 53 meanings of the word BIND. You can also add a definition of BIND yourself

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BIND


BIND stands for Berkeley Internet Name Domain and is an implementation of DNS. DNS is used for domain name to IP address resolution.
Source: sans.org

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BIND


Usually in the book arena, but not exclusively, the joining of leafs or signatures together with either wire, glue or other means.
Source: printindustry.com

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BIND


"anything that binds," in various senses, late Old English, from bind (v.). Meaning "tight or awkward situation" is from 1851.
Source: etymonline.com

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BIND


Old English bindan "to tie up with bonds" (literally and figuratively), also "to make captive; to cover with dressings and bandages" (class III strong verb; past tense band, past p [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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BIND


to connect or stick together.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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BIND


Berkeley Internet Name Domain. The standard TCP/IP naming service that links network names with IP addresses.
Source: wildpackets.com (offline)

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BIND


adhere: stick to firmly; "Will this wallpaper adhere to the wall?" something that hinders as if with bonds create social or emotional ties; "The grandparents wan [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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BIND


to fasten or tie together
Source: eenglish.in

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BIND


(1) To assign a value to a symbolic placeholder. During compilation, for example, the compiler assigns symbolic addresses to some variables and instructions. When the program is bound, or linked, the [..]
Source: webopedia.com

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BIND


Danish word for "volume."
Source: familysearch.org

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BIND


Norwegian word for "volume (book)."
Source: familysearch.org

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BIND


To use a liquid to make dry ingredients stick together and hold their shape.
Source: lifestylefood.com.au (offline)

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BIND


To fasten the leaves of a book together and enclose them in a protective cover, a process known as binding, originally done by hand but in modern book production almost entirely by machine.
Source: abc-clio.com

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bound [band] bind·ing 1 a : to make responsible for an obligation (as under a contract) [agents have the power to the insurer "R. I. Mehr"] b : to burden with an obligation [prevented marrie [..]
Source: dictionary.findlaw.com

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BIND


To fasten sheets or signatures and adhere covers with glue, wire, thread, or by other means.
Source: bindagraphics.com

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BIND


To attach chemically; form a chemical bond with. See also binding site
Source: natureinstitute.org

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BIND


Bind means to impose one or more legal duties on a person or institution. For example, the parties are bound by the terms of the contract; the courts are bound by precedents. The words to bind or bind [..]
Source: definitions.uslegal.com

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BIND


BIND (Berkeley Internet Name Domain) is an implementation of the DNS protocol. The BIND DNS server is used on the vast majority of Internet name servers, and is the reference implementation of the DNS [..]
Source: help.dyn.com

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BIND


To stir any of a variety of ingredients (eggs, flour and butter, cheese, cream, etc.) into a hot liquid, causing it to thicken. This practice is used widely when preparing Jamaican food recipes. Especially Jamaican bread recipes. T
Source: getjamaica.com (offline)

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BIND


To add eggs, cream or liquid to a recipe to make the other ingredients hold together
Source: foodinaminute.co.nz

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BIND


To add an ingredient such as eggs, which hold together the other ingredients, as in meatloaf.
Source: lespetitesgourmettes.com

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BIND


To incorporate a thickening agent into a hot liquid.
Source: atomicgourmet.com

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BIND


(n) something that hinders as if with bonds(v) stick to firmly(v) create social or emotional ties(v) make fast; tie or secure, with or as if with a rope(v) wrap around with something so as to cover or [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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BIND


bind (persons): adstringo
Source: latin-dictionary.org (offline)

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In the context of OGC Web Services, Bind refers to Web service components connecting and executing through interfaces
Source: opengeospatial.org

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The most popular software on the Internet for providing DNS services. Your ISP is likely running BIND. Key point: BIND provides about 80% of all DNS services. It is also enabled by default on a lot [..]
Source: linuxsecurity.com

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BIND


To fasten sheets or signatures and adhere covers with glue, wire, thread, or by other means.
Source: e-printing.co.uk (offline)

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BIND


Berkeley Internet Name Domain
Source: honeywellprocess.com (offline)

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To grab and hold; a bird can bind to quarry, a lure, or the falconer's hand. Block perch
Source: themodernapprentice.com

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This is the process of making the controller (Transmitter)talk to the quadcopter or the drone.
Source: thefancyvoyager.com

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BIND


To start coverage by accepting the quotation offered and meeting the special conditions and agreeing on a date to start coverage.
Source: boatus.com (offline)

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BIND


to cause a mixture to hold together by beating in an egg, sauce, or some other thickening agent.
Source: cooksrecipes.com

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BIND


to cause a mixture to hold together by beating in an egg, sauce, or some other thickening agent.
Source: recipebits.com (offline)

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To thicken a sauce or hot liquid by stirring in ingredients such as eggs, flour, butter, or cream.
Source: ces.ncsu.edu (offline)

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BIND


Add a liquid, egg or melted fat to a dry mixture to hold it together.
Source: indian-cooking.info

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BIND


In building market processes, lime reacts either with CO2 or with the silica in sand to form calcium carbonate or hydrated calcium silicates. This produces strong and durable bonds. Lime reacts with p [..]
Source: lhoist.com

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BIND


To assign a specific network address to a socket.
Source: archive.oreilly.com (offline)

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BIND

Source: hpfc.org.uk

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BIND


To make yourself or someone else legally responsible for something.
Source: courts.ca.gov

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BIND


To assign a specific network address
Source: perldoc.perl.org

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vt,vi. Informally, to ``stick to'' or ``stick together''; usually used to indicate which operand(s) are associated with which operator, based on precedence rules.
Source: c-faq.com

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BIND


See Berkeley Internet Name Domain.
Source: freebsd.org

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Refers to when a player binds a line of text chat to a button in order to spam and flood the chat.
Source: wiki.teamfortress.com

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In certain MMOs, characters are teleported back to a safe spot when they die. This spot is predetermined by the user. The act of determining the safe spot requires an explicit action by the user. That [..]
Source: mmos.com

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BIND


Action of getting linked with a bindstone, where you respawn after death.
Source: mmoglossary.com

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If you develop your army into such a position that your opponent finds difficult to attack, or break, your position is called a Bind. As an example, the sequence: 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 g6 5. c4 * reaches a position known as the Maróczy Bind.
Source: chess-game-strategies.com (offline)

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BIND


Where a player is so tied up he has trouble finding useful moves. See "Squeeze".
Source: arkangles.com

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Biomolecular Interaction Network Database. A collection of records documenting molecular interactions. The contents of BIND include high-throughput data submissions and hand-curated information gathered from the scientific literature.
Source: emice.nci.nih.gov (offline)

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BIND


To thicken or smooth out the consistency of a liquid.
Source: homebaking.org

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BIND


Short for Berkeley Internet Name Domain, a DNS type. BIND is designed for UNIX systems based on BSD, the version of UNIX developed at the University of California's Berkeley campus
Source: glossary.westnetinc.com (offline)

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BIND


Usually in the book arena, but not exclusively, the joining of leafs or signatures together with either wire, glue or other means.
Source: luminous-landscape.com

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BIND


To fasten sheets or signatures with wire, thread, glue. or by other means.
Source: nexcards.com (offline)

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BIND


(intransitive) To tie; to confine by any ligature. *Shakespeare *: They that reap must sheaf and bind. (intransitive) To cohere or stick together in a mass. ''Just to make the cheese more bind [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org





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