1. unbound - Adjective
2. unbound - Verb
Derived from unbind
4. unbound - Adjective Satellite
of Unbind
imp. & p. p. of Unbind.
Source: Webster's dictionaryWriting is nothing less than thought transference, the ability to send one's ideas out into the world, beyond time and distance, taken at the value of the words, unbound from the speaker. Arthur M. Jolly
Shelley, who in Prometheus Unbound had observed that the wise lack love and those who have love lack wisdom, went to his end in The Triumph of Life asking why good and the means of good were irreconcilable. Harold Bloom
He puts his bones back on, Turning the clock back an hour. She knows flesh, that skin balloon, the unbound limbs, the boards, the roof, the removable roof. She is his selection, part time. You know the story too! Look, when it is over he places her, like a phone, back on the hook. Anne Sexton
Sound unbound by nature becomes bounded by art. Dejan Stojanovic
What then did you expect when you unbound the gag that muted those black mouths? That they would chant your praises? Jean-Paul Sartre
As remote as the rings of Saturn... A man with his stubby million-rand finger perennially prodding the public's pulse, his eyes constantly roving the horizons of the future, Kerzner has the power of a Prometheus unbound. Jani Allan