Also 5–6 tynyd, 6 tinded, 7 tyned. [f. TINE sb.1 (or v.3) + -ED.] Furnished with or having tines. a. Of a fork, rake, harrow, or other implement. Chiefly in comb., as long-tined, three-tined, etc.

1

c. 1440.  Promp. Parv., 494/1. Tynyd, wythe a tyne.

2

1523.  Fitzherb., Husb., § 15. They be lyke sloted and tinded.

3

1577.  Harrison, England, III. viii. (1878), II. 53. The heads of saffron are raised in Iulie, either with plough, raising, or tined hooke.

4

1611.  Speed, Hist. Gt. Brit., VI. v. 58. In his hand for a Scepter, a Mace three-tined, as Neptune or God of the Sea.

5

1698.  G. Thomas, Pensilvania, 8. Their Ground is harrowed with Wooden Tyned Harrows.

6

  b.  Of a deer’s horns. In quot. 1530 Her. having the tines of a specified tincture.

7

c. 1410.  Master of Game (MS. Digby 182), xxiv. An hert þat bereth an hye heede þat is wyde and hye ytyneded with longe beemes.

8

1530.  in Ancestor, XI. (1904), 182. A hertes hede silver tynyd gold.

9

1878.  S. Lanier, Rev. Hamish, 1. A ten-tined buck in the bracken lay.

10

1902.  Times, 13 Nov., 13/6. A goodly proportion of strongly tined heads.

11