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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
jointed
adjective
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ At last she stood naked, her long legs like a jointed wooden doll's, ready for her bath.
▪ But like all armoured animals they have sacrificed flexibility for security and must now be content with a stiffly jointed existence.
▪ However, others appear to be made up in regular jointed sections which do not conform to the natural lines of cleavage.
▪ Such buds containing re-aggregated cells do not develop normally but they can form jointed cartilage elements and sometimes very good-looking digit-like structures.
▪ The group of jointed animals known as arthropods includes scorpions and spiders, and almost all of these are venomous.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Jointed

Jointed \Joint"ed\, a. Having joints; articulated; full of nodes; knotty; as, a jointed doll; jointed structure. ``The jointed herbage.''
--J. Philips. -- Joint"ed*ly, adv.

Jointed

Joint \Joint\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Jointed; p. pr. & vb. n. Jointing.]

  1. To unite by a joint or joints; to fit together; to prepare so as to fit together; as, to joint boards.

    Pierced through the yielding planks of jointed wood.
    --Pope.

  2. To join; to connect; to unite; to combine.

    Jointing their force 'gainst C[ae]sar.
    --Shak.

  3. To provide with a joint or joints; to articulate.

    The fingers are jointed together for motion.
    --Ray.

  4. To separate the joints; of; to divide at the joint or joints; to disjoint; to cut up into joints, as meat. ``He joints the neck.''
    --Dryden.

    Quartering, jointing, seething, and roasting.
    --Holland.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
jointed

early 15c., from joint (n.).

Wiktionary
jointed

Etymology 1

  1. 1 Having joints. 2 (label en Irish slang of an entertainment venue) extremely full of people, packed, chockablock Etymology 2

    v

  2. (en-past of: joint)

WordNet
jointed

adj. having joints or jointed segments;

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "jointed".

Each chain over a shore span consists of two segments, the longer attached to the tie at the top of the river tower, the shorter to the link at the top of the abutment tower, and the two jointed together at the lowest point.

It carried him to Sio Bibble and the Naboo officials now, jointed armatures working in careful precision, allowing him to remain relaxed and comfortable as he took note of the fear in the eyes of the officials backing Bibble.

Micro-men the heavy emergent Mark 6s with their clawed and jointed arms and monocular cephalic turrets, the rest lower-numbered Marks of the sort that merely made Richard-the-Third humps under clothing.

If she went back to where the guide had first displayed the weakness in the barrier, she would see a similar flood of living feculence crawling toward her: huge, colorful bellies dragging, legs like jointed trees feeling their way across the ground.

Against that reflection stood the red-robed shape of the Bishop of Gae, Govannin Narmenlion, her bald head and narrow, delicately jointed hands giving her the appearance of a skeleton wrapped in a crimson billow of flame.

They inspected the powerful gasolene engines, saw how they worked the endless belts made of plates of jointed steel, which, running over sprocket wheels, really gave the tank its power by providing great tractive force.

With regard to instances of jointed authorship, unless there be some definite declaration on the part of one of the authors as to his particular share in a work, or unless there be some unusual and special circumstances bearing on the point, such perquisitions and analysis almost inevitably resolve themselves into a cloud of guess-work and bootless hazardry and vague perhaps.

He cleaned and skinned and jointed the hyrax, roasted its meat in the hot ashes, and ate until his stomach hurt, cracking bones for hot marrow and licking the fatty juices from his fingers.

As it dawned upon me first, it presented a sort of metallic spider with five jointed, agile legs, and with an extraordinary number of jointed levers, bars, and reaching and clutching tentacles about its body.

The second device was decidedly in sectile in appearance, with six jointed legs, a small head equipped with long fronds of antennae, and a squat, ovoid, bulging body that would, when polished, gleam with gorgeous iridescence.

There were appendages both jointed and tentacular, patches of scales, spines and leathery, wrinkled tegument together with the suggestion of mouth and gill openings, all thrown together in a gruesome hodge-podge.

They were leathery, hairy, dark-skinned feet, broad and flat and surprisingly long, with toes so extrusile and multiple jointed that they almost seemed to have the function of fingers.

It is found in practice that the stresses on the several members do not differ sensibly whether these members are pinned together with a single pin or more rigidly jointed by several bolts or rivets.

Where his younger brother had the big slab-sided Flanders-mare build of the old woman, who, though she was drowned in pale cool fat, still had the solid muscles given by a hundred years of buckling into the beetroot harvest under the skies of Artois, he had the loosely jointed clotheshorse look of the old man who, in his sleeveless vest and bib-and-brace salopette, had the scrawny neck of a plucked turkey and whose puckered blue jaw moved awkwardly and woodenly to and fro in an uncertain wobble the whole time, rather as though a wasp were buzzing about just at the back of his neck and he was trying to catch a glimpse of it, to know where to launch a smack from the desiccated forearm.

Also a Salicornia, or jointed Glasswort, or Saltwort, or Crabgrass, is sold as Samphire for a pickle, in the Italian oil shops.