释义 |
bonded, ppl. a.|ˈbɒndɪd| [f. bond n.1 + -ed.] 1. Held, pledged, or confirmed by bond.
1597Shakes. Lover's Compl. 279 That strong bonded oth. 1844Tupper Proverb. Philos. (1852) 384 Death..hath seized his bonded debtor. 2. Put into bond (see bond n.1 12). Hence bonded store, warehouse, a store or warehouse in charge of Custom-house officials, in which goods may be kept in bond.
1809R. Langford Introd. Trade 130 Bonded goods, goods deposited in a warehouse till the duty is paid. 1846Dickens Pictures from Italy 56 Goods brought in from foreign countries pay no duty until they are sold and taken out, as in a bonded warehouse in England. 1851H. Martineau Hist. Peace iv. xiv, The bonded stores connected with the Dublin custom-house. 1868Rogers Pol. Econ. xxii. (ed. 3) 289 Bonded warehouses, in which duty-paying goods, whether liable to customs or excise, are stored till they are needed for sale. 1884Pall Mall G. 15 Aug. 5/2 Wholesale and bonded supplies of the article.
Add:3. Of a material: strengthened by being bonded with a matrix (cf. *bond v. 1 d). Of a fabric: that has been bonded to another layer of material; consisting of two or more layers of material bonded together (cf. *bond v. 1 c). Freq. prefixed by a noun attrib. denoting the material constituting the matrix or the additional layer. Also applied to articles made from bonded materials.
1938Trans. Amer. Soc. Mech. Engin. LX. 63/2 Reinforced hot-pressed resin-bonded two-ply faces are also frequently used with crotch, burl, swirl, and stump veneers. 1940, etc. [see resin-bonded adj. s.v. resin n. 4 a]. 1953[see chip-board s.v. chip n.1 9 a]. 1963A. J. Hall Textile Sci. iii. 156 A very convenient and satisfactory method for making bonded-fibre fabrics has been developed. 1965Sunday Mail (Brisbane) 24 Oct. 24 California Miss has used bonded crepe to give the soft, gentle fabric a more substantial weight. 1986Horse & Rider Sept. 6 (Advt.), Riding boot... Hard wearing, bonded lining. Hence ˈbondedness n.
1952L. N. Ferguson Electron Struct. Organic Molecules ii. 43 Thus there is a decrease in the double-bondedness of the carbon-carbon bond that is common to the chelate and the aromatic rings. 1985Amer. N. & Q. May/June 141/1 The anecdote..illustrates only our need for bondedness to others. |