bend

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For the verb: "to bend"

Simple Past: bent
Past Participle: bent

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
bend1
verb (past and past part. bent)
  • 1 shape or force (something straight) into a curve or angle.

    ■ (of a road, river, or path) deviate from a straight line.

  • 2 (of a person) incline the body downwards; stoop.
  • 3 interpret or modify (a rule) to suit oneself.
  • 4 direct (one's attention or energies) to a task.
  • 5 Nautical attach (a sail or cable) by means of a knot.
noun
  • 1 a curved or angled part.

    ■ a curve in a road, path, or river.

  • 2 a kind of knot used to join two ropes together, or one rope to another object.
  • 3 (the bends) [treated as sing.] decompression sickness.
– phrases
bend someone's ear informal talk to someone, especially at length or to ask a favour.
bend one's elbow N. Amer. informal drink alcohol.
round (or US around) the bend informal mad.
– derivatives
bendable adjective,
bendiness noun,
bendy adjective (bendier, bendiest).
– origin OE bendan ‘put in bonds, tension a bow by means of a string’, of Gmc origin.



Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
bend2
noun Heraldry a broad diagonal stripe from top left to bottom right of a shield.
– origin ME: from Anglo-Norman Fr. bande, OFr. bende ‘flat strip’.
'bend' also found in these Oxford entries:

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