noun
- legal contracts binding a person to work for another for a specified period, especially as an apprentice or servant
- notches or cuts made along an edge, especially for identification or decoration
Usage: historical; often plural
Usage: technical
Examples
- Many colonial settlers came to America under indentures that required years of labor.
- The apprentice signed indentures to learn the blacksmith’s trade.
- Indentured servants worked without wages until their indentures expired.
- The historical museum displayed original indentures from the 1700s.
- The document’s indentures helped prevent forgery in medieval times.
- Matching indentures on both copies proved the contract’s authenticity.