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Definition of fetter verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

fetter

verb
 
/ˈfetə(r)/
 
/ˈfetər/
[usually passive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they fetter
 
/ˈfetə(r)/
 
/ˈfetər/
he / she / it fetters
 
/ˈfetəz/
 
/ˈfetərz/
past simple fettered
 
/ˈfetəd/
 
/ˈfetərd/
past participle fettered
 
/ˈfetəd/
 
/ˈfetərd/
-ing form fettering
 
/ˈfetərɪŋ/
 
/ˈfetərɪŋ/
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  1. fetter somebody (literary) to limit somebody’s freedom to do what they want
    • He felt fettered by petty rules and regulations.
  2. fetter somebody to put chains around a prisoner’s feet synonym shackle
    • A man lay fettered on the floor of the prison cell.
  3. Word OriginOld English feter, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch veter ‘a lace’, from an Indo-European root shared by foot.
See fetter in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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