Definition
A legal agreement or decision that you absolutely, positively must follow—no take-backs, no "just kidding." When something is binding, it has the force of law behind it, meaning you can't just ignore it without consequences. It's the difference between a pinky promise and a contract signed in blood (metaphorically speaking, though lawyers would probably prefer actual signatures).
Example Usage
The arbitration clause created a binding agreement that prevented either party from taking disputes to court.
Source: Wiktionary via Free Dictionary API
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See “binding” in Corporate Speak, Gen-Z Slang, Pirate Speak, and more.
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