rare. [f. prec.] trans. To affect with kibes or chilblains; incorrectly, to kick or gall (with allusion to quot. 1602 in prec. 1 b).

1

1757.  Mrs. Griffith, Lett. Henry & Frances (1767), IV. 206–7. I had walked … to London-House, with … the Boots that had kibed me at Windsor, on my Legs.

2

1887.  A. Birrell, Obiter Dicta, Ser. II. 267. The toe of the peasant is indeed kibing the heel of the courtier.

3