rare. [f. prec.] trans. To affect with kibes or chilblains; incorrectly, to kick or gall (with allusion to quot. 1602 in prec. 1 b).
1757. Mrs. Griffith, Lett. Henry & Frances (1767), IV. 2067. I had walked to London-House, with the Boots that had kibed me at Windsor, on my Legs.
1887. A. Birrell, Obiter Dicta, Ser. II. 267. The toe of the peasant is indeed kibing the heel of the courtier.