"Bound for the bottom" typically refers to a situation or condition where something is destined to fail or decline significantly. It can describe a person, organization, or economic situation that is experiencing a downward trajectory with little hope for recovery. This phrase often conveys a sense of inevitability about a negative outcome.
In the word "boundless," "bound" refers to limits or restrictions. When something is described as "boundless," it implies that it is limitless, infinite, or unrestricted, suggesting an absence of boundaries or confines. Essentially, it conveys the idea of vastness or an unbounded extent.
A function whose upper bound would have attained its upper limit at a bound. For example, f(x) = x - a whose domain is a < x < b The upper bound is upper bound is b - a but, because x < b, the bound is never actually attained.
4.46 is a fixed number: it has no upper nor lower bound. To 2 dp it is 4.46
The path of an airplane flying north as it crosses an east-bound highway.
I think up
What does felony BOUND OVER TO CPC mean
It is quite likely that she is egg-bound.
Steel-bound means "bounded by steel."
diaphragm
when an organelle is membrane bound that means that the organelle has a protective shield around it.
Bed bound usually means that a person is too ill or disabled to get out of bed.
They have someone help them get out
a friend or tied up
I'm not sure what word you mean, so here are the definitions of two words that you might mean: distend: dilate: become wider; "His pupils were dilated" destined: * bound: headed or intending to head in a certain direction; often used as a combining form as in `college-bound students'; "children bound for ... * bound(p): (usually followed by `to') governed by fate; "bound to happen"; "an old house destined to be demolished"; "he is destined to be famous"
A striker-bound condition is when the firing pin stays in contact with the primer to make opening difficult.
Bound Over.
it could mean looking with your head a direction