rare. [f. LEDGE sb.]
1. intr. To form a ledge.
1598. Stow, Surv., xvi. (1603), 139. Euery Boorde ledging ouer other.
1879. Jefferies, Wild Life in S. Co., 98. It [snow] melts on the south of every furrow leaving a white line where it has ledged on the northern side.
2. trans. To furnish with ledges (obs.); to form as a ledge.
1599. Nashe, Lenten Stuffe, Wks. (Grosart), V. 231. The burdensome detrimentes of our hauen, which euery tweluemonth deuoures a Justice of peace liuing, in weares and banckes to beat off the sand, and ouerthwart ledging and fencing it in.
1845. Talfourd, Vac. Rambles, I. 239. The road sometimes pierced through the blasted rock, sometimes ledged along it.