High-heeled

"High-heeled" in a Sentence (13 examples)

I don't like high-heeled shoes.

Many women like to wear high-heeled shoes.

Sometimes we call the really high-heeled shoes that women wear "killer heels."

Mary wore high-heeled shoes.

Those blue high-heeled shoes would go well with this dress.

The petite woman with flowing black hair and high-heeled sandals stands on a church’s steps, looking more Italian than Sophia Loren. She hands out an Italian breakfast staple — cornetti — pastries filled with custard — to a half-dozen Americans. As they nibble, Mazzaglia, Toni for short, introduces herself.

For instance, impressions in the earth, of a certain size, shape, and pattern, would normally be sufficient evidence for a confident belief that a woman had walked over the ground wearing high-heeled shoes.

I preferred to think about school and a government job and how I would one day put on high-heeled shoes and wear a long skirt like other girls.

They wore designer clothes, white, tight, hip-huggers, and low neck blouses, high-heeled shoes, especially in the winters when they wore those sexy high-heeled boots, and tight jeans.

High-heeled shoes are not typically constructed to accommodate the average male's heft, foot size, or gait. All high-heeled shoes, particularly extremely thin “stiletto” heels, require technical acumen in their design because the structure of the shoe focuses immense pressure on a small area; a petite woman in stilettos can exert 20 times the pressure of a 6,000 pound elephant under her heel.

Within moments the high-heeled workers of Data Air are ensconced in the air conditioned hum of their "open office."

By all logic, high-heeled women should not constitute a threat: but they do.

The foot abduction is smaller (out-toeing is smaller) in the high-heeled gait (Adrian and Karpovich, 1966; Snow and Williams, 1994; Stefanyshyn et al., 2000), or no significant difference exists between the flat-heeled and the high-heeled gait (Merrifield, 1971).

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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.