| var. of indo- before a vowel: indamine. |
| investigative new drug. |
| 1. | independence. |
| 2. | independent. |
| 3. | index. |
| 4. | indicated. |
| 5. | indicative. |
| 6. | indigo. |
| 7. | indirect. |
| 8. | industrial. |
| 9. | industry. |
| in the name of God. |

n]
| 1. | Also called American Indian, Amerind, Amerindian, Native American. a member of the aboriginal people of America or of any of the aboriginal North or South American stocks, usually excluding the Eskimos. |
| 2. | any of the indigenous languages of the American Indians. Abbreviation: Ind |
| 3. | a member of any of the peoples native to or inhabiting India or the East Indies. |
| 4. | a citizen of the Republic of India. |
| 5. | Slang. a person who performs a required task or carries out the instructions of superiors: We have too many chiefs and not enough Indians. |
| 6. | Astronomy. the constellation Indus. |
| 7. | of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the American Indians or their languages. |
| 8. | of, pertaining to, or characteristic of India or the East Indies. |
| 9. | made of Indian corn: Indian meal. |
| 10. | Zoogeography. oriental (def. 3). |
| 11. | Phytogeography. belonging or pertaining to a geographical division comprising India south of the Himalayas, and Pakistan and Sri Lanka. |
| a combining form representing indigo in compound words: indophenol. |
| a regulatory classification assigned by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to an unproven drug, allowing its use in approved studies with human patients. Abbreviation: IND |
"An Indian gift is a proverbial expression, signifying a present for which an equivalent return is expected." [Thomas Hutchinson, "History of Massachusetts Bay," 1765]Meaning "one who gives a gift and then asks for it back" first attested 1892.
IND
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