saddle-oxforded
English
Etymology
From saddle oxford + -ed.
Adjective
saddle-oxforded (not comparable)
- Wearing a saddle oxford or oxfords.
- 1969, The Literary Review, page 464:
- […] all shirt-waisted and saddle-oxforded and pleading loudly: “Teach me. Teach me. Teach me.”
- 1973, John Bowers, No More Reunions, New York, N.Y.: E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., →ISBN, page 135:
- Looking down at her scuffed, saddle-oxforded foot, her socks white and turned down neatly as always, I suddenly slipped into an old reverie of seeing us in a villa on the Riviera.
- 1978, William Hedgepeth, “Interlude: A Day in the Life…”, in The Hog Book, Athens, Ga.; London: Brown Thrasher Books, the University of Georgia Press, published 2008, →ISBN, page 121:
- Or like some 1950s Hollywood depiction of a gang of teen-age hoods (duck-ass hairdos, turned-up collars, short sleeves rolled high, Levi’s low-slung and jackboots and acne) gearing up to savage and pillage the clean-cut, crew-top, saddle-oxforded basketball star for Central High who slipped and squealed to the principal about how he had come upon Arnie, Rance and B.J. in the lower-level men’s room smoking strange cigarettes and sniffing “that stuff.”
- 2008, Coleen Grissom, A Novel Approach to Life, Trinity University Press, →ISBN, page 50:
- I was also witty as a child, and this intimidated most who lusted after my 150-pound chartreuse-sweatered, corduroy-skirted, saddle-oxforded body.
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Synonyms
- saddle-shoed