Lexicographical Neighbors of Intoed
Literary usage of Intoed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Modern Daughters: Conversations with Various American Girls and One Man by Alexander Black (1899)
"The intoed tendency is beautifully extenuated in a most logical way. Plainly it
would be as foolish for a woman A to walk with her toes out as . ..."
2. Physiognomy Illustrated; Or, Nature's Revelations of Character: A by Joseph Simms (1889)
"In all dealings or transactions with those whose locomotive pedestrian habit is
intoed, every one should be warily on his guard. It was observed that when ..."
3. Allen's Synonyms and Antonyms by Frederic Sturges Allen (1920)
"... innuendo, sneer, slur, item (obs. or heal US), inkling, glance. into, prep,
intil (Scot.); spec, within. intoed, a. pigeon-toed. in tolerance ..."
4. The Magazine of American History with Notes and Queries by John Austin Stevens, Benjamin Franklin DeCosta, Martha Joanna Lamb, Henry Phelps Johnston, Nathan Gilbert Pond, William Abbatt (1880)
"The feet, as also the hands, were small, and in walking they were intoed.
Obesity was not usual unless in advanced life. Congenital malformations were ..."
5. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: “a” Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature edited by Hugh Chisholm (1910)
"It is smaller and more compact than the Kerry, shorter in the leg, and intoed
before and behind. Whilst valuable as a beef-making animal, it is equally ..."