Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for infolding. Search instead for enfolding.

infolding

American  
[in-fohl-ding] / ɪnˈfoʊl dɪŋ /

noun

  1. invagination.


Etymology

Origin of infolding

infold 2 + -ing 1

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.

Twitching and infolding to the squealing feedback, his arms drawing invisible trails on the air, Nodine searches time and space for the echoes of his lost youth.

From The Guardian • Apr. 27, 2013

The mechanism is uncertain, but the live-virus vaccine might cause swelling of bowel lymph nodes and increase contraction, leading to infolding.

From Nature • May 25, 2011

A rotavirus vaccine was suspended in the United States in 1999 after public-health officials received 15 reports of intussusception, an infolding of the bowel, in vaccinated infants.

From Nature • May 25, 2011

Under the silver paper which Rudolf hurriedly tore off, was layer after layer of pink tissue infolding something which the boy, when he came to it at last, tossed on the floor in his disgust.

From The Wonderful Bed by Knevels, Gertrude

He, too, looked across toward the Northern lines, and, civilian though he was, he knew that their tremendous infolding curve was more than twice as great as that forming the lines of the South.

From Before the Dawn A Story of the Fall of Richmond by Altsheler, Joseph A. (Joseph Alexander)