[General] to be duty bound/to have a duty

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kompstar

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Jan 11, 2015
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Polish
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Poland
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Hello,

Are the sentences below correct and natural? Do they mean the same?

I.
1. Local officials are duty bound to serve the community.
2. Local officials have a duty to serve the community.

II.
1. We are duty bound to justify how we spend our funds.
2. We have a duty to justify how we spend our funds.
 
1. Local officials are duty-bound to serve the community.
2. Local officials have a duty to serve the community.

II.
1. We are duty-bound to justify how we spend our funds.
2. We have a duty to justify how we spend our funds.

Note the hyphen!
Otherwise, your sentence pairs are correct and they do mean the same thing.
 
Yes — 'duty-bound' is an adjective.

Click here to find many dictionaries which prefer the hyphenated version.
 
I think without the hyphen my sentences also correct. Am I right?
 
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