View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Limbed.

Limbed

Limbed | Limbs | Limb | Limber

Limbed meaning

Having limbs. | Preceded by a descriptive word: having limbs of a specified kind or quality.

Example sentences (19)

A new analysis published Thursday in finds that geographically-isolated populations of the eight-limbed sea creatures mated freely around 125,000 years ago, signaling an ice-free corridor during a period when were similar to today.

These are records of startling originality and playfulness, of cacophonous discord and sudden heartbreaking melody, in which it seemed the artist was trying to incorporate the whole history of American song into his loose-limbed poetic storytelling.

For those on the shorter, less long-limbed side, it can often feel like most sports simply aren't for you.

Long-limbed and elegant, Diop is the kind of charismatic stage personality you instantly fall for.

Still, this four limbed serpent-like creature did not fully train young Yoda, but more introduced him to the teachings of the Force while Yoda was stranded on an unspecified swamp planet.

NPR music writer Stephen Thompson says the record finds "Sam Beam, John Convertino, Joey Burns and members of the extended Calexico and Iron & Wine casts at their loose-limbed best.

The little boy has even defeated long-limbed adults who have dared to challenge him and has shared the moments he left them in the dust on his Instagram page of approximately 301,000 followers.

Zverev had beaten Djokovic for the ATP Finals trophy in November, where his long-limbed groundstrokes proved too powerful to handle.

It lay there defenseless, oblivious and gently loose limbed as a newborn human.

It's anarchic, joyous and so loose-limbed he barely seems to have bones in his legs.

Their double-headed, multi-limbed aggression has also added a degree of darkness, a sense of the sinister that’s often been missing from ’s output for some time.

A tetrapod is any member of the taxonomic unit Tetrapoda (which is defined by descent from a specific four-limbed ancestor) whereas a quadruped actually uses four limbs for locomotion.

Baba Hari Dass (1999) Patanjali's writing also became the basis for a system referred to as "Ashtanga Yoga" ("Eight-Limbed Yoga").

He is a thin, long-limbed man with an angular, drawn face, glasses, a tufty beard, and hair drawn into two points above his ears.

The hind limbs of ancestral frogs presumably contained pairs of muscles which would act in opposition (one muscle to flex the knee, a different muscle to extend it), as is seen in most other limbed animals.

The recurve bow's bent limbs have a longer draw length than an equivalent straight-limbed bow, giving more acceleration to the projectile and less hand shock.

The Yoga Sūtras codifies the royal or best (rāja) yoga practices, presenting these as an eight-limbed system (ashtānga).

This eight-limbed concept is derived from the 29th Sutra of the Book 2 of Yoga Sutras.

Unlike the gaits of limbed animals, which form a continuum, each mode of snake locomotion is discrete and distinct from the others; transitions between modes are abrupt.