in-kneed

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1
in-kneed
in-kneed, a. (ˈɪnˈniːd, -ˌniːd) [f. in adv. 13 + knee n. + -ed2.] Having the legs bent inwards at the knees.1724 Auld Rob Morris in Ramsay's Tea-t. Misc. (1733) I. 63 He's out-shin'd, in-knee'd and ringle-ey'd too. 1741 A. Monro Anat. (ed. 3) 277 Weak rickety Children become inkneed. 1836–9 Todd Cyc... Oxford English Dictionary
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scrae
▪ I. scrae, n.1 Sc. (skre) Also scray, skrae. [? Subst. use of scrae a.] 1. A diminutive or skinny person.1803 Jamieson in Scott Minstrelsy III. 363 [To a crying child], Lie still, ye skrae. 1823 Lockhart Reg. Dalton vii. ii. III. 119 Yon poor shaughlin' in-kneed bit scray of a thing! 1819 W. Tennan... Oxford English Dictionary
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The Relapse
Anthony Aston vividly described Verbruggen as "a little in-kneed, which gave him a shambling gait, which was a carelessness, and became him." wikipedia.org
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out-
out- in comb. is used with substantives, with verbs and their derivatives, and with other adverbs. In OE. {uacu}t adv. was already prefixed (1) to ordinary ns. in the sense ‘that is without’, ‘out-lying’, ‘external’, as in {uacu}tland a country that is out, a distant or foreign land, {uacu}there an ... Oxford English Dictionary
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in
▪ I. in, prep. (ɪn) Forms: α. 1– in; also 3 Orm. inn, 5 yn(e, ynne. β. 2–6 i, i-, 3–4 y, 6– i'. [Common Teut. = OFris., OS., OHG., Goth. in, ON. {iacu} (Sw., Da. i), cognate with L. in, Gr. ἐν. In OE., in all those texts in which the word occurs, the full form in is used, but in early ME. the apocop... Oxford English Dictionary
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