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Pigeon-toed   /pˈɪdʒən-toʊd/   Listen
Pigeon-toed

adjective
1.
Having feet that turn inward.  Antonym: splayfooted.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Pigeon-toed" Quotes from Famous Books



... Fothergil's studio in Greenwich Village, where I had gone to see how his poem on Moonlight was getting along. He strode to the window. Fothergil is not tall, and he is slightly pigeon-toed — the fleshly toes of Fothergil symbolize the toes of his ever-fleecing soul — but he strides. Female poets undulate. Erotic male poets saunter. Tramp poets lurch and swagger. Fothergil, being a vers libre poet, a Prophet of the Virile, a Little Brother of the Cosmic Urge, is compelled by what ...
— Hermione and Her Little Group of Serious Thinkers • Don Marquis

... Williams disgustedly. "I wish I was! I got four pigeon-toed, bow-legged, bat-eared Moonstoners down in that meadow, just itchin' mad to cut loose. And they ain't sayin' a word, which is suspicious. Worryin' across the old dry spot the last three days has kind of het 'em up. And then hearin' ...
— Overland Red - A Romance of the Moonstone Canon Trail • Henry Herbert Knibbs

... before us, and this was our road. The New Zealanders always travel on foot, one after the other, or in Indian file. Their pathways are not more than a foot wide, which to a European is most painful; but as the natives invariably walk with the feet turned in, or pigeon-toed, they feel no inconvenience from the narrowness. When a traveller is once on the path, it is impossible for him to go astray. No other animal, except man, ever traverses this country, and his track cannot be ...
— A Narrative of a Nine Months' Residence in New Zealand in 1827 • Augustus Earle

... making the old steps creak, ahead, and Pardaloe, with his long, soft, pigeon-toed tread close behind, the unwilling landlord was taken up the stairs, and the two men thoroughly searched the house. Lefever lowered his voice when the hunt began through the bedrooms—few of which contained even a bed—but he kept up a running fire of talk that gave ...
— Nan of Music Mountain • Frank H. Spearman



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