Also 56 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.
c. 1440. Promp. Parv., 494/1. Tynyd, wythe a tyne.
1523. Fitzherb., Husb., § 15. They be lyke sloted and tinded.
1577. Harrison, England, III. viii. (1878), II. 53. The heads of saffron are raised in Iulie, either with plough, raising, or tined hooke.
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.
1698. G. Thomas, Pensilvania, 8. Their Ground is harrowed with Wooden Tyned Harrows.
b. Of a deers horns. In quot. 1530 Her. having the tines of a specified tincture.
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.
1530. in Ancestor, XI. (1904), 182. A hertes hede silver tynyd gold.
1878. S. Lanier, Rev. Hamish, 1. A ten-tined buck in the bracken lay.
1902. Times, 13 Nov., 13/6. A goodly proportion of strongly tined heads.