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View definitions for binding

binding

adjective as in necessary

adjective as in confining

noun as in cover; something which fastens

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Example Sentences

Binding the resolution of my case to progress in the nuclear negotiations is profoundly unjust.

That ruling is binding law in the United States, no matter what the former vice president says.

It was done after we had received a binding legal opinion from Justice and approval from the White House to proceed.

While a good start, some security experts say the guidelines should be binding.

But the amendment was non-binding -- and thus largely symbolic.

Again, common law decisions are not binding on the courts that make them like statutes or legislative commands.

Whatever reason the transaction affords for binding the former, it supplies for holding the latter bound.

A benefit conferred, in the honest, though mistaken, belief that such a promise is binding ought in justice to be restored.

But then she had sworn, and to some people, and Georgie was one of these, an oath remains ever binding.

Even although he had tacitly consented to Romanoff's proposal he saw no necessity for binding himself.

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On this page you'll find 78 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to binding, such as: conclusive, irrevocable, mandatory, required, essential, and imperative.

From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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