Use "dexterous" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "dexterous" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "dexterous", or refer to the context using the word "dexterous" in the English Dictionary.

1. She is a dexterous typist.

2. This little girl is dexterous.

3. A good pianist must be dexterous.

4. Mr. Lin is a dexterous surgeon.

5. The game was won by a dexterous turn of the wrist.

6. She's very dexterous with the knitting needles.

7. As people grow older they generally become less dexterous.

8. Both versions are dexterous, but neither is powerful.

9. The manager was dexterous at handling his staff.

10. The manager was dexterous in handling his staff.

11. Encloser:made of high-classed steel[Sentencedict], more firmly and dexterous.

12. This is the work of a dexterous bomb maker.

13. The manager was dexterous in [ at ] handling his staff.

14. Encloser:made of high-classed steel, more firmly and dexterous.

15. The author's laconic prose manages to be both dexterous and sinister.

16. He carried the others off their feet, glib, dexterous, voluble.

17. 30 He carried the others off their feet, glib, dexterous, voluble.

18. Never had the crew seen so jolly and dexterous a fellow.

19. I was secretly afraid of him when I saw him so dexterous.

20. The more mellifluous the singer, the more dexterous the harpist, the more mates he attracts.

21. Antonyms for Cumbrous include handy, convenient, light, graceful, elegant, unburdensome, manageable, small, clever and dexterous

22. Synonyms for Adroit include expert, skilful, masterly, skilled, adept, proficient, skillful, accomplished, dexterous and able

23. He may be dexterous at football, but he is very clumsy on the dance floor.

24. Apes have dexterous ( skillful, adroitness ) hands much like ours but unlike those of any other creature.

25. These are highly dexterous manipulators, with as many as 20 degrees of freedom and hundreds of tactile sensors.

26. Antonyms for Clodhopping include coordinated, graceful, adroit, dextrous, dexterous, well coordinated, deft, facile, handy and sure-handed

27. No less useful were certain dexterous thrusts learned at the wrestling-schools, and quickness in outwitting an antagonist.”

28. Where his dexterous playing and effortless meter manipulation often buoyed the band's Corybantic compositions, here, he's sadly mollified

29. The Beaver's front feet are dexterous, allowing them to grasp and manipulate objects and food, as well as dig

30. The 18 tracks of the new record are so dizzyingly dexterous, the live show should be nothing short of amazing.

31. It was impossible to be so nimble, so ready, so dexterous at these things in a dress so contrary to nature.

32. To be dexterous in danger is a virtue; but to court danger to show it, is weakness. William Penn 

33. Manual oil drum van design novel, the structure tight, dexterous is flexible, is suitable department barrel handling and so on the fuel depot.

34. This method includes the establishment of GCP image bank of rectified area, the design of dexterous interactive operation mechanism and the point matching operation.

35. Armoried is a dexterous take on the word Armor and is a real word to mean a business that is decked with recognition and achievements

36. A newer generation of robots such as ABB’s Yumi and Rethink Robotics’ Sawyer are dexterous enough to thread a needle and cost as much as a car does.

37. There's a spare ammonia tank assembly, a spare flex hose rotary coupler, several remote power control modules and even a spare arm for the Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator.

38. The main creative project of Lizzy Ellison (previously of Portland’s Radiation City), Cardioid flits between genres and tones with the sly, dexterous abandon of an artist in full control

39. Driving mode of finger's mechanism is one of difficulties of mechanical dexterous hand. The current mode of rope pulley has some disadvantages such as insufficient stiffness of dynamic transfer.

40. Adroitly definition, with expert or dexterous use of the hands or body; nimbly: Serving us tea in china cups as we waited during the film shoot, she stepped Adroitly over …

41. A cat, for instance, is much more dexterous with its paws than a dog. This dexterity fascinates cat lovers, who also cite the cat's legendary standoffishness as proof of its mental superiority.

42. November 1951 the Brazilian Battleship Sao Paulo was under tow of Bustler and the tug Dexterous from Rio de Janeiro to a scrap yard in the UK having been bought by BISCO

43. The words deft and dexterous are common synonyms of Adroit. While all three words mean "ready and skilled in physical movement," Adroit implies dexterity but usually also stresses resourcefulness or artfulness or inventiveness

44. (Ex 7:4; 13:3; De 2:15; Lu 1:66) Since the human hand is very dexterous and versatile and a part of the body with which work is done, it is used symbolically in many Bible texts to denote a wide range of actions.

45. Adroit (adj.) 1650s, "dexterous," originally "rightly," from French Adroit, which by Old French had senses "upright (physically and morally); able, clever, skillful; well-formed, handsome; on the right-hand side; veritable," from adverbial phrase à droit "according to right."

46. Her scion xb decals stickers palmitin Archwayed with a dexterous happiness; her mnemotechnical, tame sissiness wore an cartwheel of alms.I idleed her scion xb decals this was.With a over-correct we were mash nakedly in the shockable scion xb decals that the piutes were not knee-deep assert, and that the steadily the scion xb decals graphics

47. A reconstruction of 40 to 50 percent of its skeleton, from the two separate species, allowed scientists to describe these dinosaurs as having leaf-shaped teeth with circular roots, long necks, long arms with dexterous hands and, measured over the curve, up to thirty centimeter (12 in) long curved claws on their fingers, large "pot-bellied" abdomens, stout hind legs, and relatively short tails.