Be duty bound In english explanation

The meaning, explanation, definition and origin of the idiom/phrase "be duty bound", English Idiom Dictionary ( also found in Vietnamese )

author Caroline Tran calendar 2021-03-14 08:03

Meaning of Be duty bound (redirected from Duty Bound )

Synonyms:

accountable , obliged , be responsible for , liable

Duty Bound British American adjective formal

If you say you are duty-bound to do something, you are emphasizing that you feel it is your duty to do it.

To be responsible for something or expected to do something.

As a teacher, you are duty-bound to teach them thoroughly.

When your parents pass away, you're duty-bound to take care of all your siblings.

He's duty-bound to submit all the documents as soon as his boss comes in.

Morally or legally obliged to do something.

Good morning, sir. We're duty-bound to inform you that you are arrested for deliberately killing a child.

No one made me say that, I was duty-bound to say so.

We felt duty-bound to solve the incident even though it may did harm to us.

Other phrases about:

in the trust of (someone)

Being looked after or protected by someone

the ball is in somebody's court

 

It is used to tell someone that it is time for them to take action or make a decision.

be duty bound
Responsible for doing something
fall (squarely) on (someone's) shoulders

If something falls (squarely) on someone’s shoulders, it is the responsibility that one have to take.

hand over the baton

To give someone a particular responsibility or duty

Grammar and Usage of Duty Bound

To be + duty-bound + to do something

Origin of Duty Bound

Sources place this idiom’s origin in the 1500s and it was actually redundant since the 1400s "bound" also meant “under obligations”. Digital records in the form of duty-bound or by duty-bound to go back to at least the 1600s. It appears as if the word is, however, started to disappear from use around the early 1900s. Over the course of the last four or five centuries, this phrase has not changed in meaning. “It was his bounden duty to accept the office” (Harriet Martineau, The Manchester Strike, 1833). At some point, this locution was grammatically changed to the present participle usage, as in “I’m duty-bound to report this violation to the dean.”
 

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TODAY
to rob the cradle
have a romantic or sexual relationship with or marry someone much younger than oneself.
Example: The middle aged man robbed the cradle with the teenager.
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