A set of integers is S-recognizable in an abstract numeration system S if
the language made up of the representations of its elements is accepted by a
finite automaton. For abstract numeration systems built over bounded languages
with at least three letters, we show that multiplication by an integer
λ≥2 does not preserve S-recognizability, meaning that there always
exists a S-recognizable set X such that λX is not
S-recognizable. The main tool is a bijection between the representation of an
integer over a bounded language and its decomposition as a sum of binomial
coefficients with certain properties, the so-called combinatorial numeration
system