[ UK /pˈiːbɔːld/ ]
[ US /ˈpaɪˌbɔɫd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. having sections or patches colored differently and usually brightly
    a jester dressed in motley
    a particolored dress
    the painted desert
    pied daisies
    a piebald horse
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How To Use piebald In A Sentence

  • It looks to me like a "piebald" black duck. aside from the whitish-cream color the whitish ring around the bill has me stumped. The other day i was out taking pictures of ducks,and their was a solid white duck with some brown, does anyone have an idea what
  • The Mage rode in on a beautiful piebald draft horse just before the first dinner bell.
  • I quickly discovered that a piebald pigeon has taken up residence atop the light fixture on the balcony.
  • The seventh time I was riding a bucking piebald.
  • And then, to prove to the Farseers that they were vulnerable, the Piebalds would pull me down as hounds pull down a stag. THE GOLDEN FOOL: BOOK TWO OF THE TAWNY MAN
  • The word "piebald" could also apply, though it generally refers to a combination of black and white. Roundrock Journal
  • She moved with a slink that was more feline than Piebald's walk.
  • True piebalds never have blue eyes and always have white tail tips.
  • The big piebald and her rider continued towards a large jump that had been set up and leapt over it with graceful ease.
  • First came a tolerably good band, a little too drummy, but still not amiss -- well dressed, only the performers being of all colours, from white, down to jet -- black, had a curious hodge -- podge, or piebald appearance. Tom Cringle's Log
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