Home › Words › P › pintopinto/ˈpɪntəʊ/pinto means pied, mottled.pinto is pronounced /ˈpɪntəʊ/.EtymologyBorrowed from Spanish pinto (“painted, mottled”).adjPied, mottled.nameA municipality in Santiago del Ester, ArgentinaA town in Ñuble Province, Biobío Region, Chile.A town in the autonomous community of Madrid, SpainnounA horse with a patchy coloration that includes a white color.e.g.“Chick Norris leaned low over his pinto.” — 1936 August, Joseph S. Fleming, “Flying Hoofs. Chick Norris again leads his Mounted Patrol”, in Boys' Life, page 10:A member of a mountain tribe of Native Americans living near Acapulco, Mexico.Definitions & examples from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).Words closest in meaningBy meaning, not spelling — each word's AI semantic fingerprint, nearest first.tobiano 75% match — A pinto horse with a spotted colour pattern consisting of white-haired, pink-skinned patches on a base coat colour. vs pinto →overo 71% match — A pinto horse with white-over-dark body markings. vs pinto →piebald 62% match — Spotted or blotched, especially in black and white. vs pinto →appaloosa 62% match — A horse breed best known for its colorful spotted coat pattern. vs pinto →palomino 61% match — A horse with a golden-colored coat and a white or cream-colored mane and tail. vs pinto →skewbald 61% match — Marked with patches of white and non-black colours. vs pinto →cropout 58% match — A horse that has spotted coloration but whose sire and dam were both solid-coloured. vs pinto →dapple 58% match — A mottled marking, usually in clusters. vs pinto →