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47 Sentences With "bind up"

How to use bind up in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bind up" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bind up". Mastering all the usages of "bind up" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The government is trying to bind up wounds created by sanctions.
We ask God to bind up the wounds of all who've been harmed. pic.twitter.
But he did his part to try to bind up the wounds from the primary campaign.
The children explain that you can bind up the souls of recently deceased people in walnut shells.
" The time had come, the president concluded, "to unify, to bind up the nation's wounds" and "begin a great national reconciliation.
Barack Obama was elected president in no small part because he promised to bind up the nation's wounds and withdraw its troops.
As Abraham Lincoln said, unity comes "With malice toward none, with charity for all," in order "to bind up the nation's wounds."
I think of the turmoil in my life and bind up all that energy, bring it to the table, and it's a release.
He is the person we turn to in times of national tragedy to "bind up the nation's wounds" — in the words of Abraham Lincoln.
But Mr. Wilder's election did not fully bind up the state's wounds, and the decades since have been met with both advancements and setbacks.
Down one path, Mr. Booker's, lies a mission of healing and hope, with a campaign to bind up social wounds that have deepened in the Trump era.
"America's first black president didn't bind up the nation's wounds but scratched them open every time police killed a black man," he wrote in the conservative publication City Journal.
In art, that means the opportunity to develop and explore an aesthetic vocabulary that speaks to whatever feels most necessary, which will inevitably bind up issues of identity and politics along with a host of other concerns.
CreditCreditDoug Mills/The New York Times IT was a crucial speech, high-stakes even for a man used to giving important speeches: The first black president of the United States had to acknowledge, and then bind up, the nation's racial wounds.
With malice toward none, with charity to all; with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation's wounds…to do all which may achieve…a just and lasting peace…
Yet while both men have been accused of acting out of expedience by the left and among the thinning ranks of anti-Trump Republicans, what is striking is how easy a president often consumed with slights has made it for his former critics to bind up old wounds.
" Here is the complete quote from Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address, from which the VA derives its honorable mission: "With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow, and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.
With the gnomic writings of Pibrac it was long customary to bind up those of Antoine Faber (or Favre) (1557–1624) and of Pierre Mathieu (1563–1621).
" ... She bids us bind up her wounds and pour on the oil of peace." Pickens died in Edgefield, South Carolina, and was buried at Willow Brook Cemetery in Edgefield.
To Bind Up the Wounds, LSU Press, 1999, p. 128 In 1910 the congregation divided into four provinces. The Sisters are known for their work in education and health care, and their opposition to the death penalty.
J. Biol. Chem. 2006, 281, 1630–1635. This large binding area explains why previous studies could only bind up to three molecules on a PA63 heptamer. The co-crystal structure of the PA octamer in complex with N-terminal LF revealed that the binding interaction is, in fact, two discontinuous sites.
The transferrin receptor mRNA is rapidly degraded without the IRE-BP attached to it. The cell stops producing transferrin receptors. When the cell has obtained more iron than it can bind up with ferritin or heme molecules, more and more iron will bind to the IRE-BPs. That will stop transferrin receptor production.
C. tetani is susceptible to a number of antibiotics, including chloramphenicol, clindamycin, erythromycin, penicillin G, and tetracycline. However, the usefulness of treating C. tetani infections with antibiotics remains unclear. Instead, tetanus is often treated with tetanus immune globulin to bind up circulating tetanospasmin. Additionally, benzodiazepines or muscle relaxants may be given to reduce the effects of the muscle spasms.
The approaches were crowded with wounded, dying and dead.... I > remember that Mrs. Weikert went through the house, and after searching > awhile, brought all the muslin and linen she could spare. This we tore into > bandages and gave them to the surgeons, to bind up the poor soldiers' > wounds. By this time, amputating benches had been placed about the house.
The divinity lives in history, and > reveals itself therein. History is, in union with nature, the sole place of > divine activity... one continuous stream of divine activity flows through > time... To bind up religion with history, as modern theologians do, and to > represent an historical religion as the need of modern man, is no proof of > insight, but of a determination... to recognise the Christian religion > alone.
The closing paragraph contains two additional glosses from scripture "let us strive on to. . . bind up the nation's wounds" is a reworking of . Also, "to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan" relies on . Lincoln's point seems to be that God's purposes are not directly knowable to humans, and represents a theme that he had expressed earlier.
Once in this shape, the complex can competitively bind up to three EFs or LFs, forming a resistant complex. Receptor-mediated endocytosis occurs next, providing the newly formed toxic complex access to the interior of the host cell. The acidified environment within the endosome triggers the heptamer to release the LF and/or EF into the cytosol. It is unknown how exactly the complex results in the death of the cell.
Slip rings are made in various types and sizes; one device made for theatrical stage lighting, for example, had 100 conductors.Alan Hendrickson, Colin Buckhurst Mechanical design for the stage Focal Press, 2008 , page 379 with an illustration of pancake and drum-type slip rings. The slip ring allows for unlimited rotations of the connected object, whereas a slack cable can only be twisted a few times before it will bind up and restrict rotation.
Mair 1990:30). The Shuowen Jiezi defines shen as shen and says that in the 7th lunar month when yin forces increase, bodies shenshu "bind up". The earliest written forms of shen "spirit; god" occur in Zhou dynasty bronzeware script and Qin dynasty seal script characters (compare the variants shown on the "Chinese etymology" link below). Although has not been identified in Shang dynasty oracle bone script records, the phonetic shen has.
The custom of breaking this wine-cup, after the bridal couple had drained its contents, is common to both the Greek Christians and members of the Jewish faith. It is thrown against a wall or trodden under foot. The phrase "bride- cup" was also sometimes used of the bowl of spiced wine prepared at night for the bridal couple. Bride-favours, anciently called bride-lace, were at first pieces of gold, silk or other lace, used to bind up the sprigs of rosemary formerly worn at weddings.
It is believed by many that they have gone to recruit a guerrilla band, and will return to prey on Union men in the lower part of the State. They could have obtained plenty of recruits nigher home. Doubtless, Visalia would have furnished several birds of prey and a surgeon or two, to bind up their broken bones, and very likely a Chaplain to minister to their bruised souls, and a number of spies, sneaks, and informers. As to good fighting men, they would be scarcer hereabouts.
To Bind Up the Wounds: Catholic Sister Nurses in the U.S. Civil War, LSU Press, 1989 Among those particularly remembered is Sister M. Xavier Dunn for her patient work in Confederate hospitals. Congress received so many testimonials to the Sisters care, that in 1871 it voted $12,000 in reparations to the rebuild the orphanage destroyed during the siege.Joslyn, Mauriel Phillips. Confederate Women, Pelican Publishing, 1996 As a congregation of diocesan right, the Sisters live under the full authority of the local Ordinary of the diocese in which they serve.
Straight line drives such as threaded nut/bolt drives change drive rate when converted to a circular motion. It is also time consuming to reset via spinning the nut back to the starting point. Amateurs have tackled this by employing curved bolt designs and even using specially shaped cams to convert the straight line motion to a variable speed motion. High mechanical loadings from heavy telescopes or using them at low geographic latitudes can cause the mount to bind up, requiring more complicated improved bearing surfaces to overcome this.
Biotin - Avidin can bind up to four molecules of biotin simultaneously with a high degree of affinity and specificity Avidin is a tetrameric biotin-binding protein produced in the oviducts of birds, reptiles and amphibians and deposited in the whites of their eggs. Dimeric members of the avidin family are also found in some bacteria. In chicken egg white, avidin makes up approximately 0.05% of total protein (approximately 1800 μg per egg). The tetrameric protein contains four identical subunits (homotetramer), each of which can bind to biotin (Vitamin B7, vitamin H) with a high degree of affinity and specificity.
The dedication ceremony was buzzed by a plane trailing a banner proclaiming Sic semper tyrannis, which is not only Virginia's motto (meaning "Thus always to tyrants"), but also what John Wilkes Booth, according to his diary, called out while assassinating Lincoln. The statue is made of a bronze cast depicting Lincoln and his son Tad on a bench with Lincoln's arm around his son. The bench was deliberately made long enough so that viewers may sit next to either statue on the bench to take photographs. The words "To Bind Up The Nation's Wounds" from Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address are carved into granite behind them.
Layard valued his correspondence with Blyth greatly and was saddened by his death: This was the beginning of a correspondence continued monthly for years, & of the pleasure & profit it was to me, I can give no idea. I used carefully to bind up his letters as they came, & I often now, when I see them, think with a sad heart of the bright intelligence and vast ornithological knowledge that sank with him, in shadows, in the grave. Layard spent ten years in Ceylon (Sri Lanka), where he studied the local fauna with Robert Templeton. He was forced to leave Ceylon by his and his wife's poor health.
On 21 March 1995, Smith was appointed Bishop of East Anglia by Pope John Paul II. He received his episcopal consecration on the following 21 May from Cardinal Basil Hume OSB, with Archbishop Michael George Bowen and Bishop Alan Charles Clark serving as co-consecrators. Smith was later named Archbishop of Cardiff on 26 October 2001,Press Office of the Holy See-Italian following the resignation of the Capuchin, John Ward, amid a controversy about paedophile priests in the archdiocese.BBC News, New Archbishop of Cardiff enthroned, 4 December 2001BBC News, Frail Pope sees Wales' archbishop, 18 October 2003 In regard to these sexual abuse cases, Smith declared that he "wanted to help people bind up the wounds and bring healing".
While working at the National Institute of Health, Lisziewicz worked to find a gene therapy approach to treat HIV/AIDS. She based her research on discovering if small portions of gene-stopping DNA (called antisense oligonucleotides) could be created to bind up the viral RNA in retroviruses like HIV so that the virus could not make more copies of itself to continue the infection. Small pieces of messenger RNA (or mRNA) carry a copy of the cell's DNA to the ribosomes where the mRNA directs the ribosomes to create the proteins that the cells need. Viruses (like HIV) have their own set of mRNA, and they use the ribosomes of the cell they infected to make new viruses to propagate the infection throughout the body.
In 1718, French surgeon Jean Louis Petit developed a screw device for occluding blood flow in surgical sites. Before this invention, the tourniquet was a simple garrot, tightened by twisting a rod (thus its name tourniquet, from tourner = to turn). In 1785 Sir Gilbert Blane advocated that, in battle, each Royal Navy sailor should carry a tourniquet: > It frequently happens that men bleed to death before assistance can be > procured, or lose so much blood as not to be able to go through an > operation. In order to prevent this, it has been proposed, and on some > occasions practised, to make each man carry about him a garter, or piece of > rope yarn, in order to bind up a limb in case of profuse bleeding.
However, following the assassination of Buckingham, in December 1628, he became Viscount Wentworth and not long afterwards president of the Council of the North. In the speech delivered at York on taking office, he announced his intention, almost in the words of Francis Bacon, of doing his utmost to bind up the prerogative of the Crown and the liberties of the subject in indistinguishable union. "Whoever", he said, "ravels forth into questions the right of a king and of a people shall never be able to wrap them up again into the comeliness and order he found them". His tactics were the same as those he later practised in Ireland, leading to the accusation that he planned to centralise all power with the executive at the expense of the individual in defiance of constitutional liberties.
The series was set during the 1880s; a wooden plaque next to the McCain home states that the home was rebuilt by Lucas McCain and his son Mark in August 1881.The Wyoming Story part 1 & 2 (season 3) A common thread in the series is that people deserve a second chance; Marshal Micah Torrance is a recovering alcoholic, and McCain gives a convict a job on his ranch in "The Marshal". Royal Dano appeared in "The Sheridan Story" as a former Confederate soldier who is given a job on the McCain ranch and encounters General Philip Sheridan, the man who cost him his arm in battle. Learning why the man wants him dead, Sheridan arranges for medical care for his wounded former foe, quoting Abraham Lincoln's last orders to "... bind up the nation's wounds".
Fitzgibbon was born in Pithoragarh, Uttarakhand, India. He was fifteen years old, and a Hospital Apprentice in the Indian Medical Establishment, Indian Army, attached to the 67th Regiment (later The Royal Hampshire Regiment) during the Third China War when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC. On 21 August 1860 at the capture of the Northern of the Taku Forts, China, Fitzgibbon accompanied a wing of the 67th Regiment when it took up a position within 500 yards of the fort. He then proceeded, under heavy fire, to attend a dhoolie- bearer, whose wound he had been directed to bind up, and while the regiment was advancing under the enemy's fire, he ran across the open ground to attend to another wounded man. In doing so he was himself severely wounded.
Sheridan is quoting Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address, specifically the final paragraph: "With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations." Despite his status as the series' protagonist, Lucas McCain is not without fault; he has his flaws. Throughout the series, he is extremely protective of his son to the point of being over- protective at times. He also has a tendency to be stubborn, bossy, and has a bit of an inflated ego.
The same number sold but discounted at 55 percent will net the > publisher $90,000; the author's ten percent of that figure yields him > $9,000. Which is one reason why publishers prefer "net receipts" > contracts....Among the many other advantages (to the publisher) of such > contracts is the fact that they make possible what is called a 'sheet deal'. > In this, the (multinational) publisher of that same 10,000 copy print run, > can substantially reduce his printing cost by 'running on' a further 10,000 > copies (that is to say, printing but not binding them), and then further > profit by selling these 'sheets' at cost-price or even lower if he so > chooses to subsidiaries or overseas branches, then paying the author 10 > percent of 'net receipts' from that deal. The overseas subsidiaries bind up > the sheets into book form and sell at full price for a nice profit to the > Group as a whole.
Huskey created most of the design while working as a professor at Berkeley and other universities, and also as a consultant. During the 1960s the company made ground and airborne telecommunications systems for NASA. It also built the ST-124-M3 inertial platform used in the Saturn V Instrument Unit which was built by the Navigation and Control Division in Teterboro, NJ. It also developed the first automobile fuel injection system in the US. In January 1963, the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) released a report stating that the "most likely abnormality" to have caused the crash of American Airlines Flight 1 on March 1, 1962 was a short circuit caused by wires in the automatic piloting system that had been damaged in the manufacturing process. CAB inspectors had inspected units at a Teterboro, New Jersey, Bendix Corporation plant and discovered workers using tweezers to bind up bundles of wires, thus damaging them.
Q1 has the direction, "Enter Ofelia playing on a Lute..." The early modern stage in England had an established set of emblematic conventions for the representation of female madness: dishevelled hair worn down, dressed in white, bedecked with wild flowers, Ophelia's state of mind would have been immediately 'readable' to her first audiences.Showalter (1985, 80–81). In Shakespeare's King John (1595/6), the action of act three, scene four turns on the semiotic values of hair worn up or down and disheveled: Constance enters "distracted, with her hair about her ears" (17); "Lady, you utter madness, and not sorrow", Pandolf rebukes her (43), yet she insists that "I am not mad; this hair I tear is mine" (45); she is repeatedly bid to "bind up your hairs"; she obeys, then subsequently unbinds it again, insisting "I will not keep this form upon my head / When there is such disorder in my wit" (101–102). "Colour was a major source of stage symbolism", Andrew Gurr explains, so the contrast between Hamlet's "nighted colour" (1.2.68) and "customary suits of solemn black" (1.2.
Johnson had first intended his approach to Reconstruction as a delivery of predecessor Abraham Lincoln's promise to benevolently "bind up the nation's wounds" after the war was won. However, as Congress began enacting legislation to guarantee the rights of former slaves, former slaveowner Johnson refocused on actions (including vetoes of civil rights legislation and mass pardoning of former Confederate officials) that resulted in severe oppression of freed slaves in the Southern states, as well as the return of high-ranking Confederate officials and pre-war aristocrats to power in state and federal government. The policies had infuriated the Radical Republicans in Congress and gradually alienated the moderates, who along with Democrats had been Johnson's base of congressional support, to the point that by 1866 the Congress had gathered enough antipathy towards the President to enact the first override of a Presidential veto in over twenty years, salvaging a bill that extended the life of the Freedmen's Bureau. Johnson also managed to alienate his own cabinet, three members of which resigned in disgust in 1866.

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