English edit

Adjective edit

cloven-hooved (not comparable)

  1. Alternative form of cloven-hoofed.
    • 1673, James Howell, A French and English Dictionary, Composed by Mr Randle Cotgrave: with Another in English and French. Whereunto Are Added Sundry Animadversions, with Supplements of Many Hundreds of Words Never Before Printed; [], London: [] Anthony Dolle, []:
      Chevre pied. Cloven-hooved, Goat-footed; as Epithite for a Satyr.
    • 1905, W[illiam] H[enry] D[enham] Rouse, “Introduction”, in Matthew Arnold, On Translating Homer, London: John Murray, [], page 22:
      But “horses with uncloven hoof” suggests a cloven-hooved variety, which for a moment puzzles the wit, and therefore distracts.
    • 1910, Aristotle, translated by D’Arcy Wentworth Thompson, edited by J[ohn] A[lexander] Smith and W[illiam] D[avid] Ross, The Works of Aristotle, volume IV (Historia Animalium), Oxford, Oxon: At the Clarendon Press, page 499b:
      But a few animals are known to be single-horned and single-hooved, as the Indian ass; and one, to wit the oryx, is single-horned and cloven-hooved.
    • 1915 January 13, “Governor Issues New Quarantine of Sick Cattle: []”, in Waukegan Daily Sun, volume XVIII, number 10, Waukegan, Ill., page five, column 3:
      This was the state executive’s formal answer to the preliminary injunction order issued on Monday by Circuit Judge Irwin at Elgin restraining the state from killing or contracting to kill any cloven-hooved animals afflicted or exposed to the epidemic.
    • 2017, Edwin M[asao] Yamauchi, Marvin R. Wilson, Dictionary of Daily Life in Biblical & Post-Biblical Antiquity: Complete in One Volume, A-Z, Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson Publishers, →ISBN, page 755:
      The board has short legs in the shape of four cloven-hooved oxen’s feet.