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Definition of Hoofed
1. Adjective. Having or resembling hoofs. "Horses and other hoofed animals"
Similar to: Solid-hoofed
Antonyms: Unguiculate
Derivative terms: Ungulate
Definition of Hoofed
1. a. Furnished with hoofs.
Definition of Hoofed
1. Adjective. Having a hoof. ¹
2. Verb. (past of hoof) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Hoofed
1. hoof [v] - See also: hoof
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hoofed
Literary usage of Hoofed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Mammalia in Their Relation to Primeval Times by Schmidt (Eduard Oskar) (1886)
"THE UNGULATA, OR hoofed ANIMALS. The usual classification of the living mammals
furnished with hoofs into many-hoofed, double- hoofed, ..."
2. Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, Exhibiting a View of the Progressive by Robert Jameson, Sir William Jardine, Henry D Rogers (1863)
"The occurrence of a solid-hoofed variety of the hog seems, however, to have
escaped the notice of modern naturalists. I have not met with any reference to ..."
3. Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal (1863)
"On the Solid-hoofed Pig; and on a Case in which the Fore Foot of the Horse
presented Two Toes. By JOHN STRUTHERS, MD, FRCS, Lecturer on Anatomy in the ..."
4. The Collected Scientific Papers of the Late Alfred Henry Garrod by Alfred Henry Garrod, William Alexander Forbes (1881)
"Four of the young pigs are now living (a pair of solid-hoofed and a pair of
normal-hoofed), a male solid hoofed and a female split- hoofed specimen having ..."
5. Geology, Physical and Historical by Herdman Fitzgerald Cleland (1916)
"cestors of the hoofed mammals would be like when discovered. This prophecy was
fulfilled ... Divergence of the Even and Odd-toed hoofed Mammals (Ungulates). ..."
6. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1900)
"Two other orders of mammals, the Sirenia (probably a branch of the hoofed tribe),
took the CHART II.—Division of the World into three Realms and nine main ..."
7. An Etymological Dictionary of the English Language by Walter William Skeat (1893)
"... solid-hoofed, whole-hoofed ; Pliny, x. 65 ; x. 73«— Lat. solidi-, for solido-,
crude form of solidus, solid; and pes, a foot, cognate with E. foot ..."