0 present participle of anchor
1 to lower an anchor into the water in order to stop a boat from moving away
2 to act as the anchorman or anchorwoman of a programme:
3 to be the member of a team who goes last in a relay (= a type of race between two or more teams in which each person in the team runs or swims part of the race):
He was running his first race since he anchored Wales to a bronze medal in the 4 x 400m relay at the Commonwealth Games.
Future developments will include the effect of finite surface anchoring and a more realistic representation of the chevron interface.
Examination of baits may disrupt termite foraging for some period because the anchoring wire and planter bag must be removed for inspection.
In fact, most of the complexity in language structure belongs to this mapping, rather than to the forms of the anchoring representations themselves.
There are limits on boat movements and anchoring is not allowed on sensitive habitats such as coral within the parks.
A particularist anchoring of this kind would not do away with one iota of the universalist meaning of popular sovereignty and human rights.
This predicts that it is impossible to have the progressive as a source of temporal anchoring for quotation.