What is the opposite word to “indent”—“outdent” or “unindent”?





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I'm looking for the opposite word to "indent." Is it "outdent", or is it "unindent"?



Corresponding to "Tab" and "Shift Tab" in most editors.










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  • 7




    It isn't clear what you want the word to mean; "outdent" and "unindent" have two different meanings which can both be taken to be the opposite of "indent". Is the opposite of a "hill" a "plain" or a "valley"?
    – Peter Shor
    Feb 3 '14 at 2:14












  • I think you're looking for unformatted or unindented. That is not formatted or indented respectively. But, perhaps you mean a margin or a gutter margin?
    – Elliott Frisch
    Feb 3 '14 at 3:36








  • 1




    Partly due to the popularity of Microsoft and Adobe, outdent is commonly used in commercial text editors. In my experience, though, unindent (often hyphenated) is used to describe the Shift + Tab key combo in Sublime, Eclipse, and TEX. I always say un-indent since outdent also refers to a specific formatting, called a hanging paragraph.
    – emsoff
    Feb 3 '14 at 3:43






  • 2




    Indent in to the right of margin, outdent is to the left of margin, but unindent is to undo an indent. Newb is right in his answer. Both outdent & unindent are used, and have different meanings. jiyinyiyong, These are not words used in general English writing. Please refer to your software Help, or Google the definitions.
    – Kris
    Feb 3 '14 at 8:30










  • @PeterShor I misunderstood these words. It's unindent here as the only anwser said.
    – jiyinyiyong
    Feb 4 '14 at 7:59

















up vote
10
down vote

favorite
1












I'm looking for the opposite word to "indent." Is it "outdent", or is it "unindent"?



Corresponding to "Tab" and "Shift Tab" in most editors.










share|improve this question




















  • 7




    It isn't clear what you want the word to mean; "outdent" and "unindent" have two different meanings which can both be taken to be the opposite of "indent". Is the opposite of a "hill" a "plain" or a "valley"?
    – Peter Shor
    Feb 3 '14 at 2:14












  • I think you're looking for unformatted or unindented. That is not formatted or indented respectively. But, perhaps you mean a margin or a gutter margin?
    – Elliott Frisch
    Feb 3 '14 at 3:36








  • 1




    Partly due to the popularity of Microsoft and Adobe, outdent is commonly used in commercial text editors. In my experience, though, unindent (often hyphenated) is used to describe the Shift + Tab key combo in Sublime, Eclipse, and TEX. I always say un-indent since outdent also refers to a specific formatting, called a hanging paragraph.
    – emsoff
    Feb 3 '14 at 3:43






  • 2




    Indent in to the right of margin, outdent is to the left of margin, but unindent is to undo an indent. Newb is right in his answer. Both outdent & unindent are used, and have different meanings. jiyinyiyong, These are not words used in general English writing. Please refer to your software Help, or Google the definitions.
    – Kris
    Feb 3 '14 at 8:30










  • @PeterShor I misunderstood these words. It's unindent here as the only anwser said.
    – jiyinyiyong
    Feb 4 '14 at 7:59













up vote
10
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
10
down vote

favorite
1






1





I'm looking for the opposite word to "indent." Is it "outdent", or is it "unindent"?



Corresponding to "Tab" and "Shift Tab" in most editors.










share|improve this question















I'm looking for the opposite word to "indent." Is it "outdent", or is it "unindent"?



Corresponding to "Tab" and "Shift Tab" in most editors.







word-choice programming technology editing






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













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share|improve this question








edited May 10 '15 at 1:19









Sven Yargs

109k18234490




109k18234490










asked Feb 3 '14 at 2:08









jiyinyiyong

171116




171116








  • 7




    It isn't clear what you want the word to mean; "outdent" and "unindent" have two different meanings which can both be taken to be the opposite of "indent". Is the opposite of a "hill" a "plain" or a "valley"?
    – Peter Shor
    Feb 3 '14 at 2:14












  • I think you're looking for unformatted or unindented. That is not formatted or indented respectively. But, perhaps you mean a margin or a gutter margin?
    – Elliott Frisch
    Feb 3 '14 at 3:36








  • 1




    Partly due to the popularity of Microsoft and Adobe, outdent is commonly used in commercial text editors. In my experience, though, unindent (often hyphenated) is used to describe the Shift + Tab key combo in Sublime, Eclipse, and TEX. I always say un-indent since outdent also refers to a specific formatting, called a hanging paragraph.
    – emsoff
    Feb 3 '14 at 3:43






  • 2




    Indent in to the right of margin, outdent is to the left of margin, but unindent is to undo an indent. Newb is right in his answer. Both outdent & unindent are used, and have different meanings. jiyinyiyong, These are not words used in general English writing. Please refer to your software Help, or Google the definitions.
    – Kris
    Feb 3 '14 at 8:30










  • @PeterShor I misunderstood these words. It's unindent here as the only anwser said.
    – jiyinyiyong
    Feb 4 '14 at 7:59














  • 7




    It isn't clear what you want the word to mean; "outdent" and "unindent" have two different meanings which can both be taken to be the opposite of "indent". Is the opposite of a "hill" a "plain" or a "valley"?
    – Peter Shor
    Feb 3 '14 at 2:14












  • I think you're looking for unformatted or unindented. That is not formatted or indented respectively. But, perhaps you mean a margin or a gutter margin?
    – Elliott Frisch
    Feb 3 '14 at 3:36








  • 1




    Partly due to the popularity of Microsoft and Adobe, outdent is commonly used in commercial text editors. In my experience, though, unindent (often hyphenated) is used to describe the Shift + Tab key combo in Sublime, Eclipse, and TEX. I always say un-indent since outdent also refers to a specific formatting, called a hanging paragraph.
    – emsoff
    Feb 3 '14 at 3:43






  • 2




    Indent in to the right of margin, outdent is to the left of margin, but unindent is to undo an indent. Newb is right in his answer. Both outdent & unindent are used, and have different meanings. jiyinyiyong, These are not words used in general English writing. Please refer to your software Help, or Google the definitions.
    – Kris
    Feb 3 '14 at 8:30










  • @PeterShor I misunderstood these words. It's unindent here as the only anwser said.
    – jiyinyiyong
    Feb 4 '14 at 7:59








7




7




It isn't clear what you want the word to mean; "outdent" and "unindent" have two different meanings which can both be taken to be the opposite of "indent". Is the opposite of a "hill" a "plain" or a "valley"?
– Peter Shor
Feb 3 '14 at 2:14






It isn't clear what you want the word to mean; "outdent" and "unindent" have two different meanings which can both be taken to be the opposite of "indent". Is the opposite of a "hill" a "plain" or a "valley"?
– Peter Shor
Feb 3 '14 at 2:14














I think you're looking for unformatted or unindented. That is not formatted or indented respectively. But, perhaps you mean a margin or a gutter margin?
– Elliott Frisch
Feb 3 '14 at 3:36






I think you're looking for unformatted or unindented. That is not formatted or indented respectively. But, perhaps you mean a margin or a gutter margin?
– Elliott Frisch
Feb 3 '14 at 3:36






1




1




Partly due to the popularity of Microsoft and Adobe, outdent is commonly used in commercial text editors. In my experience, though, unindent (often hyphenated) is used to describe the Shift + Tab key combo in Sublime, Eclipse, and TEX. I always say un-indent since outdent also refers to a specific formatting, called a hanging paragraph.
– emsoff
Feb 3 '14 at 3:43




Partly due to the popularity of Microsoft and Adobe, outdent is commonly used in commercial text editors. In my experience, though, unindent (often hyphenated) is used to describe the Shift + Tab key combo in Sublime, Eclipse, and TEX. I always say un-indent since outdent also refers to a specific formatting, called a hanging paragraph.
– emsoff
Feb 3 '14 at 3:43




2




2




Indent in to the right of margin, outdent is to the left of margin, but unindent is to undo an indent. Newb is right in his answer. Both outdent & unindent are used, and have different meanings. jiyinyiyong, These are not words used in general English writing. Please refer to your software Help, or Google the definitions.
– Kris
Feb 3 '14 at 8:30




Indent in to the right of margin, outdent is to the left of margin, but unindent is to undo an indent. Newb is right in his answer. Both outdent & unindent are used, and have different meanings. jiyinyiyong, These are not words used in general English writing. Please refer to your software Help, or Google the definitions.
– Kris
Feb 3 '14 at 8:30












@PeterShor I misunderstood these words. It's unindent here as the only anwser said.
– jiyinyiyong
Feb 4 '14 at 7:59




@PeterShor I misunderstood these words. It's unindent here as the only anwser said.
– jiyinyiyong
Feb 4 '14 at 7:59










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
9
down vote



accepted











Corresponding to "Tab" and "Shift Tab" in most editors.




In that case you'll want unindent, as it reverses the indent action, and as outdent refers to a (usually left-) hanging block of text.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    2
    down vote













    The opposite of indent is outdent, according to Christopher Hoot, graduate of Yale University and graphic design instructor at the University of Akron.



    Outdent is modelled on indent, replacing in with its opposite, out.



    It refers to multident -> multiple “dents” in a paragraph.



    Example usage:




    You may choose to indent or outdent this paragraph or line of type.




    Verb outdent is to indent negatively, bring towards the margin.




    By default, the summary tasks are bold and outdented, and the subtasks are indented beneath them.




    You can also use de-indent.



    Source:




    • Wiktionary






    share|improve this answer






























      up vote
      2
      down vote













      Dedent or corrupted Outdent is correct.
      http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/dedent



      (Disclaimer: The following is "from what I know")



      Latin in- (alt. im-) is a prefix, not to be confused with the english word in (which is just shorthand for inside/inward/within). But we do commonly confuse the two, which is why Outdent is a valid word.



      The prefix in-, when used with verbs, signifies "what is being done unto" rather than "what we do". (i.e. the object's perspective, figuratively "from itself/within", which is probably why people confuse the two words).



      When used with a noun or adjective, in- is typically a negator or declaration of absence (unless it's a verbal noun/adjective, in which case the verb dictates the meaning). This is similar to how the - sign in math is used to describe a negative number (i.e. inactive/inaction "not active/acting" or implosive/imposing "negatively explosive/exposing", which showcases another reason why we mistake in for in-, because an implosion is effectively an "inwards explosion").



      Here it becomes even more confusing, because we often use latin verbs as nouns and adjectives (because the english syntax, and thus vocabulary, is different from the latin one). So while the noun for the verb import should, for instance, be importation or importment, we just say "an import" or "something imported" instead. Neither importation or importment are correct english words, afaik.



      I.e. indent means "to have toothed into", whereas noun dent means "tooth" and verb edent means "to tooth into". However, edent is not a valid english word because indent or dent is used instead. Because, you know, reasons... "To tooth" is a figurative way of saying to strike, blow, or sink into.



      In other words, indent isn't even a noun, but a verb that we sometimes use as a noun. The correct noun of indent, in english, is indentation or indentment. There's no such thing as "an indent".



      Another way to explain the logic is that you cannot technically dent something "the other way" because a dent is still a dent, and it's either there or it's not. Running is similar - you can change your direction, but you'll still be running.



      Other words: Invent/event, invoke/evoke, Inject/eject, Involve/evolve
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin_words_with_English_derivatives






      share|improve this answer






























        up vote
        1
        down vote













        Ex and out have the same meaning, so exdent has exactly the same meaning as outdent (an outward space) and it was used commonly in my typography work. Un means to reverse something, undo the indent, or effectively zero it out--no indent at all, either in or out. So exdent or outdent are the words you seek, with outdent more commonly used and understood.






        share|improve this answer





















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          4 Answers
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          active

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          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes








          up vote
          9
          down vote



          accepted











          Corresponding to "Tab" and "Shift Tab" in most editors.




          In that case you'll want unindent, as it reverses the indent action, and as outdent refers to a (usually left-) hanging block of text.






          share|improve this answer

























            up vote
            9
            down vote



            accepted











            Corresponding to "Tab" and "Shift Tab" in most editors.




            In that case you'll want unindent, as it reverses the indent action, and as outdent refers to a (usually left-) hanging block of text.






            share|improve this answer























              up vote
              9
              down vote



              accepted







              up vote
              9
              down vote



              accepted







              Corresponding to "Tab" and "Shift Tab" in most editors.




              In that case you'll want unindent, as it reverses the indent action, and as outdent refers to a (usually left-) hanging block of text.






              share|improve this answer













              Corresponding to "Tab" and "Shift Tab" in most editors.




              In that case you'll want unindent, as it reverses the indent action, and as outdent refers to a (usually left-) hanging block of text.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Feb 3 '14 at 5:44









              Newb

              1,344921




              1,344921
























                  up vote
                  2
                  down vote













                  The opposite of indent is outdent, according to Christopher Hoot, graduate of Yale University and graphic design instructor at the University of Akron.



                  Outdent is modelled on indent, replacing in with its opposite, out.



                  It refers to multident -> multiple “dents” in a paragraph.



                  Example usage:




                  You may choose to indent or outdent this paragraph or line of type.




                  Verb outdent is to indent negatively, bring towards the margin.




                  By default, the summary tasks are bold and outdented, and the subtasks are indented beneath them.




                  You can also use de-indent.



                  Source:




                  • Wiktionary






                  share|improve this answer



























                    up vote
                    2
                    down vote













                    The opposite of indent is outdent, according to Christopher Hoot, graduate of Yale University and graphic design instructor at the University of Akron.



                    Outdent is modelled on indent, replacing in with its opposite, out.



                    It refers to multident -> multiple “dents” in a paragraph.



                    Example usage:




                    You may choose to indent or outdent this paragraph or line of type.




                    Verb outdent is to indent negatively, bring towards the margin.




                    By default, the summary tasks are bold and outdented, and the subtasks are indented beneath them.




                    You can also use de-indent.



                    Source:




                    • Wiktionary






                    share|improve this answer

























                      up vote
                      2
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      2
                      down vote









                      The opposite of indent is outdent, according to Christopher Hoot, graduate of Yale University and graphic design instructor at the University of Akron.



                      Outdent is modelled on indent, replacing in with its opposite, out.



                      It refers to multident -> multiple “dents” in a paragraph.



                      Example usage:




                      You may choose to indent or outdent this paragraph or line of type.




                      Verb outdent is to indent negatively, bring towards the margin.




                      By default, the summary tasks are bold and outdented, and the subtasks are indented beneath them.




                      You can also use de-indent.



                      Source:




                      • Wiktionary






                      share|improve this answer














                      The opposite of indent is outdent, according to Christopher Hoot, graduate of Yale University and graphic design instructor at the University of Akron.



                      Outdent is modelled on indent, replacing in with its opposite, out.



                      It refers to multident -> multiple “dents” in a paragraph.



                      Example usage:




                      You may choose to indent or outdent this paragraph or line of type.




                      Verb outdent is to indent negatively, bring towards the margin.




                      By default, the summary tasks are bold and outdented, and the subtasks are indented beneath them.




                      You can also use de-indent.



                      Source:




                      • Wiktionary







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Feb 19 '15 at 11:06

























                      answered Feb 19 '15 at 10:48









                      kenorb

                      3451416




                      3451416






















                          up vote
                          2
                          down vote













                          Dedent or corrupted Outdent is correct.
                          http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/dedent



                          (Disclaimer: The following is "from what I know")



                          Latin in- (alt. im-) is a prefix, not to be confused with the english word in (which is just shorthand for inside/inward/within). But we do commonly confuse the two, which is why Outdent is a valid word.



                          The prefix in-, when used with verbs, signifies "what is being done unto" rather than "what we do". (i.e. the object's perspective, figuratively "from itself/within", which is probably why people confuse the two words).



                          When used with a noun or adjective, in- is typically a negator or declaration of absence (unless it's a verbal noun/adjective, in which case the verb dictates the meaning). This is similar to how the - sign in math is used to describe a negative number (i.e. inactive/inaction "not active/acting" or implosive/imposing "negatively explosive/exposing", which showcases another reason why we mistake in for in-, because an implosion is effectively an "inwards explosion").



                          Here it becomes even more confusing, because we often use latin verbs as nouns and adjectives (because the english syntax, and thus vocabulary, is different from the latin one). So while the noun for the verb import should, for instance, be importation or importment, we just say "an import" or "something imported" instead. Neither importation or importment are correct english words, afaik.



                          I.e. indent means "to have toothed into", whereas noun dent means "tooth" and verb edent means "to tooth into". However, edent is not a valid english word because indent or dent is used instead. Because, you know, reasons... "To tooth" is a figurative way of saying to strike, blow, or sink into.



                          In other words, indent isn't even a noun, but a verb that we sometimes use as a noun. The correct noun of indent, in english, is indentation or indentment. There's no such thing as "an indent".



                          Another way to explain the logic is that you cannot technically dent something "the other way" because a dent is still a dent, and it's either there or it's not. Running is similar - you can change your direction, but you'll still be running.



                          Other words: Invent/event, invoke/evoke, Inject/eject, Involve/evolve
                          http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin_words_with_English_derivatives






                          share|improve this answer



























                            up vote
                            2
                            down vote













                            Dedent or corrupted Outdent is correct.
                            http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/dedent



                            (Disclaimer: The following is "from what I know")



                            Latin in- (alt. im-) is a prefix, not to be confused with the english word in (which is just shorthand for inside/inward/within). But we do commonly confuse the two, which is why Outdent is a valid word.



                            The prefix in-, when used with verbs, signifies "what is being done unto" rather than "what we do". (i.e. the object's perspective, figuratively "from itself/within", which is probably why people confuse the two words).



                            When used with a noun or adjective, in- is typically a negator or declaration of absence (unless it's a verbal noun/adjective, in which case the verb dictates the meaning). This is similar to how the - sign in math is used to describe a negative number (i.e. inactive/inaction "not active/acting" or implosive/imposing "negatively explosive/exposing", which showcases another reason why we mistake in for in-, because an implosion is effectively an "inwards explosion").



                            Here it becomes even more confusing, because we often use latin verbs as nouns and adjectives (because the english syntax, and thus vocabulary, is different from the latin one). So while the noun for the verb import should, for instance, be importation or importment, we just say "an import" or "something imported" instead. Neither importation or importment are correct english words, afaik.



                            I.e. indent means "to have toothed into", whereas noun dent means "tooth" and verb edent means "to tooth into". However, edent is not a valid english word because indent or dent is used instead. Because, you know, reasons... "To tooth" is a figurative way of saying to strike, blow, or sink into.



                            In other words, indent isn't even a noun, but a verb that we sometimes use as a noun. The correct noun of indent, in english, is indentation or indentment. There's no such thing as "an indent".



                            Another way to explain the logic is that you cannot technically dent something "the other way" because a dent is still a dent, and it's either there or it's not. Running is similar - you can change your direction, but you'll still be running.



                            Other words: Invent/event, invoke/evoke, Inject/eject, Involve/evolve
                            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin_words_with_English_derivatives






                            share|improve this answer

























                              up vote
                              2
                              down vote










                              up vote
                              2
                              down vote









                              Dedent or corrupted Outdent is correct.
                              http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/dedent



                              (Disclaimer: The following is "from what I know")



                              Latin in- (alt. im-) is a prefix, not to be confused with the english word in (which is just shorthand for inside/inward/within). But we do commonly confuse the two, which is why Outdent is a valid word.



                              The prefix in-, when used with verbs, signifies "what is being done unto" rather than "what we do". (i.e. the object's perspective, figuratively "from itself/within", which is probably why people confuse the two words).



                              When used with a noun or adjective, in- is typically a negator or declaration of absence (unless it's a verbal noun/adjective, in which case the verb dictates the meaning). This is similar to how the - sign in math is used to describe a negative number (i.e. inactive/inaction "not active/acting" or implosive/imposing "negatively explosive/exposing", which showcases another reason why we mistake in for in-, because an implosion is effectively an "inwards explosion").



                              Here it becomes even more confusing, because we often use latin verbs as nouns and adjectives (because the english syntax, and thus vocabulary, is different from the latin one). So while the noun for the verb import should, for instance, be importation or importment, we just say "an import" or "something imported" instead. Neither importation or importment are correct english words, afaik.



                              I.e. indent means "to have toothed into", whereas noun dent means "tooth" and verb edent means "to tooth into". However, edent is not a valid english word because indent or dent is used instead. Because, you know, reasons... "To tooth" is a figurative way of saying to strike, blow, or sink into.



                              In other words, indent isn't even a noun, but a verb that we sometimes use as a noun. The correct noun of indent, in english, is indentation or indentment. There's no such thing as "an indent".



                              Another way to explain the logic is that you cannot technically dent something "the other way" because a dent is still a dent, and it's either there or it's not. Running is similar - you can change your direction, but you'll still be running.



                              Other words: Invent/event, invoke/evoke, Inject/eject, Involve/evolve
                              http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin_words_with_English_derivatives






                              share|improve this answer














                              Dedent or corrupted Outdent is correct.
                              http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/dedent



                              (Disclaimer: The following is "from what I know")



                              Latin in- (alt. im-) is a prefix, not to be confused with the english word in (which is just shorthand for inside/inward/within). But we do commonly confuse the two, which is why Outdent is a valid word.



                              The prefix in-, when used with verbs, signifies "what is being done unto" rather than "what we do". (i.e. the object's perspective, figuratively "from itself/within", which is probably why people confuse the two words).



                              When used with a noun or adjective, in- is typically a negator or declaration of absence (unless it's a verbal noun/adjective, in which case the verb dictates the meaning). This is similar to how the - sign in math is used to describe a negative number (i.e. inactive/inaction "not active/acting" or implosive/imposing "negatively explosive/exposing", which showcases another reason why we mistake in for in-, because an implosion is effectively an "inwards explosion").



                              Here it becomes even more confusing, because we often use latin verbs as nouns and adjectives (because the english syntax, and thus vocabulary, is different from the latin one). So while the noun for the verb import should, for instance, be importation or importment, we just say "an import" or "something imported" instead. Neither importation or importment are correct english words, afaik.



                              I.e. indent means "to have toothed into", whereas noun dent means "tooth" and verb edent means "to tooth into". However, edent is not a valid english word because indent or dent is used instead. Because, you know, reasons... "To tooth" is a figurative way of saying to strike, blow, or sink into.



                              In other words, indent isn't even a noun, but a verb that we sometimes use as a noun. The correct noun of indent, in english, is indentation or indentment. There's no such thing as "an indent".



                              Another way to explain the logic is that you cannot technically dent something "the other way" because a dent is still a dent, and it's either there or it's not. Running is similar - you can change your direction, but you'll still be running.



                              Other words: Invent/event, invoke/evoke, Inject/eject, Involve/evolve
                              http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin_words_with_English_derivatives







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                              edited May 10 '15 at 0:48

























                              answered May 9 '15 at 23:52









                              Ronnie 'Madolite' Solbakken

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                                  Ex and out have the same meaning, so exdent has exactly the same meaning as outdent (an outward space) and it was used commonly in my typography work. Un means to reverse something, undo the indent, or effectively zero it out--no indent at all, either in or out. So exdent or outdent are the words you seek, with outdent more commonly used and understood.






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                                    up vote
                                    1
                                    down vote













                                    Ex and out have the same meaning, so exdent has exactly the same meaning as outdent (an outward space) and it was used commonly in my typography work. Un means to reverse something, undo the indent, or effectively zero it out--no indent at all, either in or out. So exdent or outdent are the words you seek, with outdent more commonly used and understood.






                                    share|improve this answer























                                      up vote
                                      1
                                      down vote










                                      up vote
                                      1
                                      down vote









                                      Ex and out have the same meaning, so exdent has exactly the same meaning as outdent (an outward space) and it was used commonly in my typography work. Un means to reverse something, undo the indent, or effectively zero it out--no indent at all, either in or out. So exdent or outdent are the words you seek, with outdent more commonly used and understood.






                                      share|improve this answer












                                      Ex and out have the same meaning, so exdent has exactly the same meaning as outdent (an outward space) and it was used commonly in my typography work. Un means to reverse something, undo the indent, or effectively zero it out--no indent at all, either in or out. So exdent or outdent are the words you seek, with outdent more commonly used and understood.







                                      share|improve this answer












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                                      answered yesterday









                                      jimmont

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