CHAINED | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
Meaning of chained in English
past simple and past participle of
chain
chain verb [T usually + adv/prep]
(PUT IN CHAINS )
to
fasten someone or something using a chain:
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases
chain verb [T usually + adv/prep]
(LINK )
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SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases
You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics:
(Definition of chained from the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus © Cambridge University Press)
Examples of chained
chained
In English, many past and present participles of verbs can be used as adjectives. Some of these examples may show the adjective use.
Arguments can be chained by regarding data also as claims, for which further data can be provided.
Other tales in the same collection feature chained madmen (pp. 360 - 61).
These are real variables in chained 1996 prices.
The chained conditional orderings may or may not overlap.
The chained line is a branch of asymmetric solutions.
Leaves' answer nodes are chained together in insertion time order, so that we can recover answers in the same order they were inserted.
They cannot be free and at peace until they are literally chained by a man.
Further, the system cannot be converted into a chained form, and neither is it nilpotent nor differentially flat.
He was ' ' chained to his activity in his entire economic and ideological existence.
During the warm months, the dogs were chained at some distance from the dwellings, but the faecal production by about 200 animals was significant.
In the development of complex applications, many similar subroutines are chained together.
Second it is very difficult to get a coherent argument when the number of chained rules is high.
If the aim is to evolve chained action/decision rules, then the fitness calculation is especially complex and computationally expensive.
Nonholonomic systems that can be reduced into a "chained form" are addressed in refs.
Even these supernatural women remain chained , waiting for rescue - or mere recognition - from mortal men.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
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Word of the Day
doggie day care
UK
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/ˌdɒɡ.i ˈdeɪ ˌkeər/
US
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/ˌdɑː.ɡi ˈdeɪ ˌker/
a place where owners can leave their dogs when they are at work or away from home in the daytime, or the care the dogs receive when they are there
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