enchained

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English

Adjective

enchained (comparative more enchained, superlative most enchained)

  1. Linked together; forming a chain or interrelated sequence.
    • 1911, Decisions of the Commissioner of Patents and of the United States Courts in Patent and Trade-Mark and Copyright Cases, page 372:
      A hem or seam for sewed articles, consisting of a main layer of textile or similar material and a superimposed layer of material having a turned-under edge and secured to said main layer by two connected rows of locked or enchained stitches entering and emerging at different points on the same side of the work , one of said rows entering under said edge, and said edge lying between the extremities of said stitches.
    • 2003 ·, Douglass Rodger Sillars, Mechanistic Investigations in Metallocene-catalyzed Alkene Polymerization Through Direct Observation of the Catalytic Species, page 132:
      In order to determine the number of regioerrors per polymer chain, the intensity of the integrals from regioerrors (both terminated and enchained) was compared to the average polymer molecular weight (Table 3.1).
    • 2007, John Chapman, ‎Bisserka Gaydarska, ‎Ana Raduncheva, Parts and Wholes: Fragmentation in Prehistoric Context, page 197:
      What this means for Dimini, with its single complete ring, is the significance of the enchained relations between residents and others living away from the site as embodied in the high proportion of orphan shell fragments.
  2. Not free; bound by chains or as if by chains; in bondage.
    • 1893, Rāya, The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, page 658:
      Tell me, O ilustriaous deity, O sinless lord of all creatures, what are those words by which one becomes enchained and what those words by speaking which one may be freed from one's bonds.
    • 1971, Joseph Strelka, Anagogic Qualities of Literature - Volume 4, page 151:
      There have been statues of enchained gods throughout Greece, and the statue of Hera of Samos was one of the most famous among them.
    • 1973, Robert Edwin Scott, Latin American Modernization Problems, page 81:
      And this man, well –I think he is enchained for the rest of his life. After a person acquires a family, and if he is a responsible person, –well, he is enchained.

Derived terms

Verb

enchained

  1. simple past and past participle of enchain