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indentured

American  
[in-den-cherd] / ɪnˈdɛn tʃərd /

adjective

  1. bound by or occurring under a written contract or formal agreement, especially to work for another.

    The five indentured electrical apprentices of the second-year class were sworn into the union on Thursday.

    Born in Belfast in 1949, he studied art while serving an indentured apprenticeship at a shipyard.

  2. relating to, done by, or being an indentured servant.

    Molly Welsh, an Englishwoman sentenced to indentured servitude in 17th-century Maryland, married an African slave named Bannaka.


verb

  1. the simple past tense and past participle of indenture.

Other Word Forms

Derived Forms

Etymology

Origin of indentured

indenture + -ed 2

Explanation

To be indentured is to be forced to work by some contract. It started out as a word for a contract between masters and apprentices. Now it describes anyone bound to work, like it or not, because of some deal. Use the adjective indentured to describe someone who's bound or attached in a legal sense. If you're an indentured plumber's apprentice, you have guaranteed that you'll do that job in a particular way, for a specific length of time. If you're indentured to your grandmother, you may have promised to feed her cat every day for a month. When the word is used in this casual way, it implies a sense of duty that's become a burden.

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Vocabulary lists containing indentured

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Living in Guadeloupe, Ms. Sinnapah Mary is an Afro-Caribbean artist who is also the descendant of Indian indentured workers brought to the island by the French after slavery ended.

From The Wall Street Journal • May 14, 2026

But the early modern economies in sugar, tobacco and gold generated empire-building profit for Europe and the early U.S. by means of enslavement and indentured servitude.

From Salon • Aug. 21, 2024

To me, indentured wealth feels like something that should be disbanded.

From Los Angeles Times • May 28, 2024

A son of a once wealthy merchant family, Joyce was being sent to the West Indies to start his new life as an indentured servant.

From National Geographic • Jan. 11, 2024

“Why not wait, Anne, and procure another indentured girl in New York?”

From "Chains" by Laurie Halse Anderson

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