shackled
v. 給(某人)帶上手銬或腳鐐( shackle的過去式和過去分詞 )
If you are shackled by something, it prevents you from doing what you want to do.
The trade unions are shackled by the law.
工會受法律的制約。
...people who find themselves shackled to a high-stress job.
發現自己被高壓工作所束縛的人們
If you throw off the shackles of something, you reject it or free yourself from it because it was preventing you from doing what you wanted to do.
...a country ready to throw off the shackles of its colonial past.
決定擺脫過去殖民束縛的國家
Shackles are two metal rings joined by a chain which are fastened around someone's wrists or ankles in order to prevent them from moving or escaping.
He unbolted the shackles on Billy's hands.
他開啟了比利的手銬。
To shackle someone means to put shackles on them.
...the chains that were shackling his legs...
銬著他雙腿的鏈子
She was shackled to a wall.
她被銬在一面牆上。
1. bound by chains fastened around the ankles
She was shackled to a wall.
她被銬在一面牆上。
The trade unions are shackled by the law.
工會受法律的制約。
The hostage had been shackled to a radiator.
當時人質被銬在暖氣片上。
He was shackled and in darkness of torment.
他被困在黑暗中備受煎熬.
Industrialists can afford to be shackled by the ideologies of politicians.
工業家可不能被政客的意識形態“束縛”住.