A hint of stiff-leggedness on their part, a lifted lip or a bristle of hair, and he would be upon them, merciless and cruel, swiftly convincing them of the error of their way. ❋ Unknown (2010)
But two-leggedness, bipedalism, is rare among living things. ❋ Unknown (2010)
A dog can be brown and four-legged, but that doesn't mean brownness and four-leggedness are the same, or even connected. ❋ Athanasius (2007)
My Grandaddy was like an animal whisperer, every species of four-leggedness flocking to him when he entered the room, so I knew she'd be right at home there. ❋ Unknown (2007)
The example is specially salient, since it is clear that, in this story, the one-leggedness of the woman in question is a metaphor for another kind of disability or imbalance. ❋ Unknown (2005)
A little above the average height, his one leggedness made him seem over six feet. ❋ Emily Bronson Conger (N/A)
After watching with a look of profound cunning on his little black face, and waiting till the Grizzly was some distance away, he silently slipped down behind the trunk, and, despite his three-leggedness, ran like a hare to the next tree, never stopping to breathe till he was on its topmost bough. ❋ Ernest Thompson Seton (1903)
To this practice, at least, I am safe in attributing the rarity, if not the positive absence, with the Indian, of that unhappy condition of bow-leggedness, of not too slight prevalence with us, and which renders its victim often a butt for not very charitable or approving comment. ❋ Unknown (1885)
An eagle's walk betrays a lamentable bandy-leggedness, and his toe-nails click awkwardly against the ground. ❋ Various (1880)
Rickets is a softening of bones in children with "bow-leggedness" the tell-tale marker. ❋ Unknown (2010)
I extolled the virtues of Nanook's one-leggedness and his mastery of the Arts Phallic. ❋ Dustin Rowles (2010)
Surgeons have found that current hip resurfacing implants and unicondylar knee implants are poorly suited to the common Japanese conditions of hip dysplasia and bow-leggedness. ❋ Unknown (2010)
John Strong (pictured, with monkey), a kindly man who runs a freak show on Coney Island, offered to buy Lilly and bring her here to the Big Apple, where she could achieve fame and fortune while amazing visitors with her many-leggedness. ❋ Unknown (2009)
Maybe, after all, bow-leggedness isn't the worst thing to put up with. " ❋ C. F. Fraser (N/A)
"Hearty as would anyway be consistent -- with one-leggedness. ❋ Unknown (1865)