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He stood in the dark parking lot, listening to the anxious chatter of the remaining indents, the whining and wailing of their children.ĭallow and a couple of other indents had returned with boxes of doughnuts and a styrofoam coffee urn, most of the people were free. The indents, glad to be outside at last, flopped contentedly on the sand, letting the sun soak into their bodies. Going out of the harbor we encounter Pictou Island and Light, and presently see the low coast of Prince Edward Island,-a coast indented and agreeable to those idly sailing along it, in weather that seemed let down out of heaven and over a sea that sparkled but still slept in a summer quiet. The boldest, darkest lines of blue and brown, ancient ideogrammatic symbols of fish, bird and conch were extended in the movement of two rounded shoulder-blades from the matt slope of the neck to their perfect centring on the indented line of spine, rippling as shadowless store lighting ran a scale down it. The Epeira takes special pains with the edge of the neck, where she fashions an indented border, the angles of which, prolonged with cords or lines, form the main support of the building. There was a deck of cumulus far below but through big breaks, the pilots could see the deeply indented coastline of the Takao area and the big concrete airdrome of Einansho. 9 (context military India dated English) To make an order upon to draw upon, as for military stores. 8 (context obsolete intransitive English) To crook or turn to wind in and out to zigzag. "hanging indent" pulls the line out into the margin. Normal indent pushes in a line or paragraph. 7 (context typography English) To begin (a line or lines) at a greater or lesser distance from the margin as, to indent the first line of a paragraph one em to indent the second paragraph two ems more than the first. 6 (context transitive obsolete English) To engage (someone), originally by means of indented contracts. 5 (context intransitive obsolete English) To enter into a binding agreement by means of such documents to formally commit (to doing something) to contract. 4 (context historical English) To cut the two halves of a document in duplicate, using a jagged or wavy line so that each party could demonstrate that their copy was part of the original whole. 3 To dent to stamp or to press in to impress as, indent a smooth surface with a hammer to indent wax with a stamp. 2 (context intransitive English) To be cut, notched, or dented. 1 (context transitive English) To notch to jag to cut into points like a row of teeth as, to indent the edge of paper. 4 A requisition or order for supplies, sent to the commissariat of an army. 3 A certificate, or intended certificate, issued by the government of the United States at the close of the Revolution, for the principal or interest of the public debt. 1 A cut or notch in the margin of anything, or a recess like a notch.