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Showing results for binder. Search instead for t-binder.
Synonyms

binder

American  
[bahyn-der] / ˈbaɪn dər /

noun

binders plural
  1. a person or thing that binds.

  2. a detachable cover, resembling the cover of a notebook or book, with clasps or rings for holding loose papers together.

    a three-ring binder.

  3. a person who binds books; a bookbinder.

  4. Insurance. an agreement by which property or liability coverage is granted pending issuance of a policy.

  5. Agriculture.

    1. an attachment to a harvester or reaper for binding the cut grain.

    2. Also called self-binder.  a machine that cuts and binds grain.

  6. any substance that causes the components of a mixture to cohere.

    Eggs, dairy, and gelatin are common binders in traditional recipes that vegan bakers have to replace.

  7. Painting. a component of paint in which pigment is suspended.

  8. (in powder metallurgy) a substance for holding compacted metal powder together while it is being sintered.

  9. Building Trades.

    1. a stone, as a perpend, for bonding masonry.

    2. a girder supporting the ends of two sets of floor joists.

    3. a substance for holding loose material together, as water or tar in a macadamized road, or polyurethane in polymer concrete.

    4. stirrup.

  10. Also called chest binder.  a compression garment for temporarily flattening a person's breast tissue, often used by gender-diverse people as part of their gender expression.

    My new binder gets my chest pretty flat, and it's more comfortable than my old one.

  11. British, Australian Slang. a large quantity, especially of food.


binder British  
/ ˈbaɪndə /

noun

  1. a firm cover or folder with rings or clasps for holding loose sheets of paper together

  2. a material used to bind separate particles together, give an appropriate consistency, or facilitate adhesion to a surface

    1. a person who binds books; bookbinder

    2. a machine that is used to bind books

  3. something used to fasten or tie, such as rope or twine

  4. informal a square meal

  5. Also called: reaper binderobsolete a machine for cutting grain and binding it into bundles or sheaves Compare combine harvester

  6. an informal agreement giving insurance coverage pending formal issue of a policy

  7. a tie, beam, or girder, used to support floor joists

  8. a stone for binding masonry; bondstone

  9. the nonvolatile component of the organic media in which pigments are dispersed in paint

  10. (in systemic grammar) a word that introduces a bound clause; a subordinating conjunction or a relative pronoun Compare linker

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Word Forms

Noun Inflected Forms

Etymology

Origin of binder

First recorded before 1000; Middle English, Old English; see bind, -er 1

Explanation

A binder is a kind of notebook meant to hold loose papers together. You might have a binder for each of the classes you're taking. One type of binder has three metal rings that keep papers securely in place, and hard plastic covers to protect them from being bent or torn. You can also use the word binder when you're talking about a sticky or adhesive substance, or anything that binds two items together. The Old English root is bindere, "a person who binds," from bindan, "to tie up."

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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

See Examples For:

As the road wears over time, the particles that break away are made up of rock, asphalt binder, and polymer together rather than plastic by itself.

From Science Daily Jun. 28, 2026

Michele described carrying a binder with hundreds of pages of medical records and creating spreadsheets to track symptoms as they trekked from hospital to hospital, doctor to doctor, to get treatment for Aidan.

From MarketWatch Jun. 27, 2026

I am not asking you to become a full-time coupon strategist with a three-ring binder and a minor reality television aura.

From Salon May 22, 2026

The binder turned out to contain nothing new and he along with others involved in the stunt were accused of betraying the movement.

From BBC Apr. 11, 2026

I get to my locker and carefully place my business binder inside.

From "Marcus Vega Doesn't Speak Spanish" by Pablo Cartaya

Some strands include binders that recognize cancer markers, while another carries a toxic drug.

From Science Daily Apr. 2, 2026

Little if anything new was in the binders, which caused a backlash.

From BBC Dec. 22, 2025

Sitting in a recliner in his library, he’d grab green Value Line binders from a nearby desk and pore through data on publicly traded companies.

From The Wall Street Journal Nov. 27, 2025

They held binders and manila folders that contained resumes and diplomas.

From Los Angeles Times Aug. 29, 2025

Lundahl explained about the binders of data on Soviet missiles.

From "Fallout: Spies, Superbombs, and the Ultimate Cold War Showdown" by Steve Sheinkin

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