indent (2 this meaning arises from the fact that agreements between mutually contracting parties were written in duplicate on one sheet, the two copies being then severed by a zigzag line)
1.
to move in a zigzag line, to
double
Ven. 704
“Turn, and return, i-ing
with the way”
; cf.
AYL. IV. iii. 114
“A green and gilded
snake . . . with i-ed glides did slip
away.”
2.
to enter into a
compact with 1H4 I. iii. 87.

