It could be used in a couple of contexts. If a garment has negative ease or is poorly fitted, it could be binding (restrictive or tight) as you try to move in it. However, most likely you are thinking of "binding off," the technique used to secure stitches when the fabric is complete and it is time to take it off the needles. There are a number of ways to bind off (also sometimes called "casting off").
To bind or hold with or as if with chains.
To bind up; to bandage.
cloth, typically produced by weaving or knitting textile fibers
Nope - suburban relates to towns & cities, whereas rural relates to countryside.
certification?
the environment as it relates to living organisms; "it changed the ecology of the island"
cable knitting, tube knitting, four needle knitting, knitting in the round, and a straight knit
you must do what is known as a bind off or cast off ( same thing) you start by knitting the first two stitches as you have been knitting .. then using your left needle insert it into the first stitch you just knitted and pass it over the second stitch you just knitted .. you should have just one stitch again on the right needle .. now knit the next stitch and once again using the left needle pass the one stitch over the other .. continue one at a time knitting one stitch .. passing over.. knitting one stitch passing over till all but one stitch remains.. place yarn over the needle and pull thru remaining stitch .. pull to tighten ..
If you mean "interest" it means something that either relates to you, or something that interests you.
The definition of chivalric is: something that relates to chivalry. Chivalric is a word that was used mostly in the Middle Ages. Another word for chivalric is chivalrous.
This could be standing in a depressed area while knitting using a round knitting needle.
Whether you call them Knitting Nancys, Bizzy Lizzys, knitting mushrooms, knitting spools, corkers, peg knitters, knitting nobbys (or knitting noddys) or knitting knobbys, these knitting devices all owe their existence to the medieval lucet. The lucet is a two pronged fork with a hole in the handle.