Definition of "piebald"
piebald
adjective
comparative more piebald, superlative most piebald
(figuratively) Of mixed character, heterogeneous.
Quotations
And at the present day, the wanton introduction of scientific terms from the Greek and Latin, and of phrases from the French, threatens to render our tongue still more piebald, heterogeneous and unwieldy.
1839, Charles Hodge, Henry Boynton Smith, “The Origin and Variations of the English Language”, in The Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review, volume XI, page 544
noun
plural piebalds
An animal with piebald coloration.
Quotations
Our neighbour's fancy was for piebald horses, and so strong was it that he wished not to have any one-coloured animals in his herd, despite the fact that he bred horses for sale and that piebalds were not so popular as horses of a more normal colouring.
1918, William Henry Hudson, Far Away and Long Ago, page 91