¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Inducting
1. induct [v] - See also: induct
Lexicographical Neighbors of Inducting
Literary usage of Inducting
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Treatise on the Law of Public Offices and Officers by Floyd Russell Mechem (1890)
"inducting Officers.—So it is held that an action can not be maintained against
the officers whose duty it is to accept an officer's bond ..."
2. Elements of Logic: Together with an Introductory View of Philosophy in by Henry Philip Tappan (1856)
"FALLACIES IN inducting LAWS. We have seen that the tests of a Law are its
sufficiency to account for the phenomena, its characteristics of universality and ..."
3. The Jurist by Great Britain Courts, Great Britain (1847)
"X. G Court of Common Pleas,"] inducting ID. Appeals under Registra- Г '. tion of
Voters Act. . . . J Court of Exchequer.... Ecclesiastical and Admiralty ..."
4. The Gentile and the Jew in the Courts of the Temple of Christ: An by Johann Joseph Ignaz von Döllinger (1906)
"... was the art of inducting the gods into their statues, and of compelling them
by mysterious hymns and ..."
5. The Works of Nathaniel Hawthorne by Nathaniel Hawthorne, George Parsons Lathrop, Julian Hawthorne (1896)
"I have serious thoughts of inducting a new incumbent in this part of the parsonage.
It is our duty to support a pig, even if we have no design of feasting ..."