|
||||||||
1. For great skill is, he prove that he wrought.[For with good reason he should test what he created.] Chaucer. That by his fellowship he color mightSpenser. Nor want we skill or art.Milton. Phocion, . . . by his great wisdom and skill at negotiations, diverted Alexander from the conquest of Athens.Swift. Where patience her sweet skill imparts.Keble. Richard . . . by a thousand princely skills, gathering so much corn as if he meant not to return.Fuller. Learned in one skill, and in another kind of learning unskillful.Hooker. Syn. Dexterity; adroitness; expertness; art; aptitude; ability. Skill, Dexterity, Adroitness. Skill is more intelligent, denoting familiar knowledge united to readiness of performance. Dexterity, when applied to the body, is more mechanical, and refers to habitual ease of execution. Adroitness involves the same image with dexterity, and differs from it as implaying a general facility of movement The same distinctions apply to the figurative sense of the words. A man is skillful in any employment when he understands both its theory and its practice. He is dexterous when he maneuvers with great lightness. He is adroit in the use od quick, sudden, and well-directed movements of the body or the mind, so as to effect the object he has in view. Skill To skill the arts of expressing our mind.Barrow. I can not skill of these thy ways.Herbert. What skills it, if a bag of stones or goldHerbert. It skills not talking of it.Sir W. Scott. Skilled |
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Copyright: All texts on Bibliomania are © Bibliomania.com Ltd,
and may not be reproduced in any form without our written permission.
See our FAQ for more details. |
||||||||