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TOEFL IELTS BNC: 1145 COCA: 1277

band

1 of 3

noun (1)

1
: something that confines or constricts while allowing a degree of movement
2
: something that binds or restrains legally, morally, or spiritually
3
: a strip serving to join or hold things together: such as
b
: a cord or strip across the back of a book to which the sections are sewn
4
: a thin flat encircling strip: such as
a
: a close-fitting strip that confines material at the waist, neck, or cuff of clothing
b
: a strip of cloth used to protect a newborn baby's navel

called also bellyband

c
: a ring of elastic
5
a
: a strip (as of living tissue or rock) or a stripe (as on an animal) differentiable (as by color, texture, or structure) from the adjacent material or area
b
: a more or less well-defined range of wavelengths, frequencies, or energies
6
: a narrow strip serving chiefly as decoration: such as
a
: a narrow strip of material applied as trimming to an article of dress
b
bands plural : a pair of strips hanging at the front of the neck as part of a clerical, legal, or academic dress
c
: a ring without raised portions
7

band

2 of 3

verb

banded; banding; bands

transitive verb

1
: to affix a band to or tie up with a band
2
: to finish or decorate with a band
3
: to gather together : unite
banded themselves together for protection

intransitive verb

: to unite for a common purpose
often used with together
have banded together in hopes of attacking the blight that is common to them all J. B. Conant
bander noun

band

3 of 3

noun (2)

: a group of persons, animals, or things
especially : a group of musicians organized for ensemble playing

Example Sentences

Verb banded the waist of the dress with a matching belt banded the newspapers together for delivery

Word History

Etymology

Noun (1)

in senses 1 & 2, from Middle English band, bond something that constricts, from Old Norse band; akin to Old English bindan to bind; in other senses, from Middle English bande strip, from Middle French, from Vulgar Latin *binda, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German binta fillet; akin to Old English bindan to bind, bend fetter — more at bind

Noun (2)

borrowed from Middle French bande "troop, company of people," borrowed from Old Occitan banda, going back to Late Latin banda, plural of bandum "flag, standard" (attested in glosses), borrowed from Gothic bandwo "sign, signal" (or a cognate Germanic word), of uncertain origin

Note: The meaning of the Latin word is well illustrated by the following passage from Paul the Deacon's History of the Lombards (Historia Langobardorum, 1.20), written in the late eighth century: "Tato vero Rodulfi vexillum, quod bandum appellant, eiusque galeam, quam in bello gestare consueverat, abstulit." ("Tato [a Lombard king] indeed carried off the banner of Rodulf [a king of the Heruli, a Germanic people], which they call bandum, and his helmet, which he had been accustomed to wear in battle") The presumption is that the standard, which served as a rallying or assembly point for a group of soldiers, was applied to the group itself, and the meaning further generalized to any company of people. — The Gothic word bandwo is generally taken as descending from Indo-European *bheh2- "shine, give light, appear" (see fantasy entry 1) though derivational detail is lacking. D. Kroonen (Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic, Brill, 2013) sees it as from *bhonh2-tu̯éh2, from the base of Germanic *bannan- "speak formally, call on, order" (from *bhonh2-e-, per Kroonen; see ban entry 1 ). The Gothic noun has a verbal derivative bandwjan "to give a sign, reveal," with a prefixed form gabandwjan. The verb is matched by Old Icelandic benda "to beckon, give a sign, forebode," apparently the only other Germanic evidence for the etymon.

First Known Use

Noun (1)

12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Verb

15th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense 1

Noun (2)

15th century, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of band was in the 12th century

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