high-heeled
Adjective
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Adjective
high-heeled (not comparable)
- (footwear) Having tall heels.
- 1987, Robert Merrihew Adams, Berkeley and Epistemology, Ernest Sosa (editor), Essays on the Philosophy of George Berkeley, page 145 ↗,
- For instance, impressions in the earth, of a certain size, shape, and pattern, would normally be sufficient evidence for a confident belief that a woman had walked over the ground wearing high-heeled shoes.
- 1987, Robert Merrihew Adams, Berkeley and Epistemology, Ernest Sosa (editor), Essays on the Philosophy of George Berkeley, page 145 ↗,
- Wearing high heels.
- 2013, Makiko Kouchi, 11: High-Heeled Shoes, Ravindra S. Goonetilleke (editor), The Science of Footwear, page 267 ↗,
- The foot abduction is smaller (out-toeing is smaller) in the high-heeled gait (Adrian and Karpovich, 1966; Snow and Williams, 1994; Stefanyshyn et al., 2000), or no significant difference exists between the flat-heeled and the high-heeled gait (Merrifield, 1971).
- 2013, Makiko Kouchi, 11: High-Heeled Shoes, Ravindra S. Goonetilleke (editor), The Science of Footwear, page 267 ↗,
- French: talon haut
- Simple past tense and past participle of high-heel
This text is extracted from the Wiktionary and it is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license | Terms and conditions | Privacy policy 0.002