bend
To strain, or to crook by straining; as, to bend a bow.
bend
To crook; to make crooked; to curve; to inflect; as, to bend the arm.
bend
To direct to a certain point; as, to bend our steps or course to a particular place.
bend
To exert; to apply closely; to exercise laboriously; to intend or stretch; as, to bend the mind to study.
bend
To prepare or put in order for use; to stretch or strain. He hath bent his bow and made it ready. Psalm 7:12.
bend
To incline; to be determined; that is, to stretch towards, or cause to tend; as, to be bent on mischief.
bend
To subdue; to cause to yield; to make submissive; as, to bend a man to our will.
bend
In seamanship, to fasten, as one rope to another or to an anchor; to fasten, as a sail to its yard or stay; to fasten, as a cable to the ring of an anchor.
bend
To bend the brow, is to knit the brow; to scowl; to frown.
bend
verb intransitiveTo be crooked; to crook, or be curving.
bend
To incline; to lean or turn; as, a road bends to the west.
bend
To jut over; as a bending cliff.
bend
To resolve, or determine.
bend
To bow or be submissive. Isaiah 60:74.
bend
nounA curve; a crook; a turn in a road or river; flexure; incurvation.
bend
In marine language, that part of a rope which is fastened to another or to an anchor.
bend
Bends of a ship, are the thickest and strongest planks in her sides, more generally called wales. They are reckoned from the water, first, second or third bend. They have the beams, knees, and foot hooks bolted to them, and are the chief strength of the ship’s sides.
bend
In heraldry, one of the nine honorable ordinaries, containing a third part of the field, when charged, and a fifth, when plain. It is made by two lines drawn across from the dexter chief, to the sinister base point. It sometimes is indented, ingrained.
bend
nounA band.