Verb They tethered the horses in the shade. The dog was tethered to the fence.
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
Separately, a cheaper device might launch alongside Nazare called Hypernova which will need a tether to a smartphone to display messages and notifications. Chris Smith, BGR, 14 Apr. 2022 Occasionally, faculty do face consequences for espousing beliefs with no tether to any plausible reality known to humankind; James Tracy at Florida Atlantic University and Joy Karega at Oberlin College are two recent examples. Michael Bérubé, The New Republic, 21 Mar. 2022 The bungee tether has an adjustable, buckle-clip waist loop on one end that attaches to the human, and a carabiner on the other end to clip into a dog’s harness or collar.Outside Online, 26 June 2020 Russian traffic to crypto exchanges skyrocketed in the early days of the Ukraine invasion, as Russians traded billions of dollars worth of rubles for bitcoin and tether in March and April. David Westenhaver, Forbes, 3 Aug. 2022 It’s a tether, however tenuous, between now and then.New York Times, 2 Aug. 2022 In the past month, more traditional hedge funds have executed trades to short tether through Genesis Global Trading Inc., one of the largest crypto brokerages for professional investors. Vicky Ge Huang, WSJ, 27 June 2022 In 2015, a 12-year-old girl at a YMCA camp in North Carolina died after her tether snapped over a 40-foot canyon. Brendan Borrell, Outside Online, 28 Feb. 2017 Ragsdale says that technology can be both an escape and a tether. Chris Woolston, Smithsonian Magazine, 18 July 2022
Verb
Both Ducey and Taylor Robson have said publicly campaigns should look forward and not tether themselves to a two-year-old election. Stacey Barchenger, The Arizona Republic, 7 July 2022 The Best Cheap Tethering Plan Not all cheap phone plans support tethering because users who tether tend to consume much more data.PCMAG, 28 June 2022 As someone who can often get lost in their headspace or the energies, my waist beads literally tether me to my physical form, reminding me to slow down and be in the here and now.Vogue, 5 May 2022 Some pumps don't tether you to an outlet but still have a wire connecting the pump to a mobile power source, like the Freemie. Jamie Spain, Good Housekeeping, 16 May 2022 The goal is certainly ambitious since current VR headsets can have a variety of limitations, including short battery life or a need to tether themselves to a PC. Michael Kan, PCMAG, 28 Apr. 2022 This is actually pretty cool and a good option for anyone who can’t tether their pup to a tree. Joe Jackson, Outside Online, 15 Aug. 2014 Yet, impactful microinteractions that tether together a unique user journey, demonstrates the power of design in details. Goran Paun, Forbes, 28 Jan. 2022 To tether the events, Ryan Seacrest will co-host the 50th annual Times Square countdown with Lisa Koshy. Kelly Wynne, PEOPLE.com, 7 Dec. 2021 See More
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English tethir, teder, probably of Scandinavian origin; akin to Old Norse tjōthr tether; akin to Old High German zeotar pole of a wagon