WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
n. the folding in of an outer layer so as to form a pocket in the surface
Word Usage
"Keesey acknowledges that writers like Woolf and Proust slow down the unfolding of scene -- which Keesey calls "infolding" -- but she can't see this as an implicit repudiation of "scene" except in its most perfunctory role as a framing device."