¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Indentations
1. indentation [n] - See also: indentation
Lexicographical Neighbors of Indentations
Literary usage of Indentations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Geological Magazine by Henry Woodward (1895)
"The lines of fracture radiate from typical indentations or dimples upon ...
This fact supports the physical or mechanical origin of the indentations of the ..."
2. Field Geology by Frederic Henry Lahee (1917)
"Pebbles with Scars or Indentations.—A. Pebbles with concave fracture ...
These scars should not be mistaken for the concave indentations next described. ..."
3. Problems of the Finishing Room: A Reference and Formula Manual for Furniture by Walter Karl Schmidt (1916)
"Unless something is done during the process of cleaning up to bring these
indentations back, they will show up after the goods are finished. ..."
4. Transactions of the Edinburgh Obstetrical Society by Edinburgh Obstetrical Society (1901)
"Mu PRESIDENT AND FELLOWS,—The subject of indentations in the skulls of the ...
Indentations of the foetal skull may be either spoon or furrow shaped. ..."
5. The British Critic, and Quarterly Theological Review by James Shergold Boone, John Henry Newman (1802)
"2- Indentations are without openings. 4. The elevations and indentations of
corrugations are of different figures. 5. Indentations change t« openings. 6. ..."
6. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1918)
"... which is nearly as long as the head, is greatly arched on the upper half,
while the lower is furnished with two or three tooth-like indentations. ..."