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I . tie [taɪ] N

1. tie (necktie):

tie

2. tie (cord):

tie

4. tie (equal ranking):

tie

II . tie <-y; -d, -d> [taɪ] VB intr

1. tie (fasten):

tie

III . tie <-y-; -d, -d> [taɪ] VB trans

1. tie (fasten together):

tie

cup tie N sports

tie down VB trans

tie up VB trans

1. tie up (bind):

tie up

5. tie up Brit (connect with):

to tie sth up with sth

tie-in [ˌtaɪˈɪn] N

II . tie in with VB intr

tie-on label [ˌtaɪˈɒnˈleɪbl] N

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
This was worn with plain court shoes with bows, no buckles, and the cravat was replaced by a white tie.
en.wikipedia.org
They were next to my bell-bottoms, tie-dyes and 8-tracks.
psychcentral.com
The aggregate attendance for those three games was nearly 47,000 and the total gate receipts of 3,043 constituted a record for a first round tie.
en.wikipedia.org
Adjacent to the park is a boardwalk with boat tie-up facilities.
en.wikipedia.org
The cable tie used to fasten his hands was only cut loose at the police station, where he also learnt the owner of the house he was guarding had died.
www.news24.com
Tie the rosemary, thyme and bay leaf up in a cheesecloth bag and set aside.
www.npr.org
The chair takes advantage of the flexibility inherent in zip tie joinery to create an articulated hammock of seating panels that conforms to the body.
www.treehugger.com
However, he would never quite tie in with his earlier successes of 1994 and 1995.
en.wikipedia.org
Ships normally tie up bow out.
en.wikipedia.org
Today there many different types of natural and synthetic materials used to tie flies.
en.wikipedia.org

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