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Noun
The man was stomped on by the animal's front hooves and dragged a few feet across the dirt, the outlets reported.—
Latoya Gayle,
PEOPLE,
30 June 2026 Some confidently lifted their hooves to remove dirt.—ABC News,
31 May 2026
Verb
Kim hoofed and sang and strummed and blew her way across stages worldwide until 1995, all while raising two children.—
Margaret Heidenry,
Vanity Fair,
24 Feb. 2026 The events involve hoofing up tall peaks, often for several thousand vertical feet, using mohair climbing skins to grip the snow.—
Nick Heil,
Outside,
15 Jan. 2016 See All Example Sentences for hoof
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English, from Old English hōf; akin to Old High German huof hoof, Sanskrit śapha
First Known Use
Noun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
: a covering of horn that protects the front of or encloses the ends of the toes of some mammals (as horses, oxen, and pigs) and that corresponds to a nail or claw