0 a rope or chain used to tie, especially an animal, to a post or other fixed place, usually so that it can move freely within a small area --
1 to tie someone or something, especially an animal, to a post or other fixed place, with a rope or chain: --
2 to connect or relate someone or something to something: --
3 to use a mobile phone as a wireless internet connection to which you can connect other devices, or to be able to be used in this way: --
This particular phone does not tether.
4 a rope, chain, or other device used to attach a person or animal to a fixed object --
The septal leaflet, as its name suggests, is tethered by numerous cords to the inlet component of the septal surface of the right ventricle.
In the dry season, they are tethered in the grazing area and rotated around it.
Thus, simple methylene tethers were designed that would link these groups together and maintain the proper distance between the two fragments.
We studied the reaction to tethered earthworms of the three most common ant species found sharing domatia with earthworms.
The other end of the molecule is tethered to a magnetic bead coated with streptavidin.
For example, consider the design of a molecule that contains three substituents tethered to a single scaffold.
All flight tests involved anaesthetizing, tethering and stimulating the insects to fly.
Agriculture is inherently unnatural, tethering the land to a single purpose, but some forms are more unnatural than others.