Skillful in physical movements; especially of the hands.
Bending and moving easily and gracefully; flexible.
Sinônimos
Examples for "fit"
Examples for "fit"
1They deserve modern, fit-for-purpose facilities that support high quality services, he said.
2His answer was simple: Your values alignment and fit within our culture.
3They also raised the issue of where victims fit into the process.
4He had asked questions about whether current laws were fit for purpose.
5Photo: Supplied Navi says it's a good fit for the corporate market.
1Prime Minister John Key said the Kiwibank deal was an elegant solution.
2Because it promises an elegant, win-win solution to the problem of poverty.
3Scanbox is an elegant solution to a simple but persistently frustrating problem.
4He is elegant, has a good repetitive easy action and excellent pace.
5An elegant use of the card distinguishes the well-informed in social usage.
1Yet there is nothing graceful about the overloaded boats heading towards Europe.
2It was a large, red brick house built along graceful Georgian lines.
3The flight of the nighthawk is free and graceful in the extreme.
4The new broom has a rare chance to suggest a graceful exit.
5The roof is battlemented, and the tracery in the windows is graceful.
1However, the changing nature, and improvements in flexible work practices, may help.
2Different parts of the economy are more flexible than others of course.
3Background: Achieving proficiency in flexible endoscopy requires a great amount of practice.
4Ms Sage said the government should be more flexible in its approach.
5Certainly our attitude to creative freedom and game development remains fairly flexible.
1Do you imagine she has given up communing with nimble young gentlemen?
2Governments are anything but nimble, let alone open, in their decision-making processes.
3These nimble operators not only help students cheat their way into universities.
4Still young and nimble, John Maclean has already had two successful careers.
5Feel that you have these strong and nimble elements in your body.
1Risa stood just a moment longer, taking in Lilith's young, lithe form.
2The leader was tall and lithe, the second very short but stocky.
3Leesil didn't need a closer look to recognize the tall lithe stature.
4She was a thing of lithe grace in her soft red silk.
5To survive we must be ever ready, ever lithe of foot -
1The Brazilian government needs to be more agile with this, he said.
2Hisresearch interests include database systems, versioning systems,semantic web, and agile software development.
3However, it was quite agile on the trail and on the rock.
4It's a small one, an agile number with a lot of glass.
5Traditional data centers are not as agile or flexible in meeting demand.
1Here are the awesome products that will leave you smooth and supple.
2The running and yoga kept him supple and younger than his years.
3It was a nice, soft, supple fabric that made shoe cleaning easy.
4All eyes were centred on the supple, graceful form of the dancer.
5The whole agile, supple nature of the Greek entered into every fence.
1Take the eggs, a limber knife and the salt to the stove.
2I guess I might as well overhaul mine and limber it up.
3His feet were also ironed, and the chain lashed to a limber.
4It was not cold and stiff but warm and limber and fleshlike.
5Now I'm back, drawn by accounts of a lighter, more limber show.
1Redeemed himself with an almost identical acrobatic effort in the second half.
2And not, I might add, doing anything unusually acrobatic at the time.
3We manage to stay inside only by performing some extraordinary acrobatic contortions.
4They are fast and acrobatic and fight with a savage, flesh-tearing ferocity.
5Orange red, pale blue, E flat minor, acrobatic, Ariel-like in its changes.
1To co-ordinate, you can't go far wrong with a willowy patterned neckscarf.
2Kathleen Beck would be no help: her daughters were willowy, complacent things.
3It was deeper than her willowy proportions had led him to expect.
4The light, willowy machines are subject to every caprice of the wind.
5Her body bent like a willowy bow, the epitome of supple strength.
1Presently, however, he hove in view, doing fearfully lissom things in mid-floor.
2He had the lissom hands and cheerful self-absorption that bring success.
3The right arm lay lissom like a snake across her breast.
4But this slim Irish girl with the young, lissom body held her own.
5Her gown hung closely to her lissom and rather full form.
1The loose-jointed giant turned on his heel and left Brent standing alone.
2He was rather tall, shaggy, loose-jointed, long-armed, broad-shouldered, and he squinted awfully.
3We won't even need a loose-jointed confession, because we caught him black-handed.
4A loose-jointed man in clerical garb came hurrying down the avenue.
5He was-letus say-something like fourteen years old; long and loose-jointed and towheaded.
1Persephone nods, then picks herself up and breaks into a loose-limbed jog.
2Lena sat loose-limbed, her head bowed, visibly sagging in front of me.
3Now, right now, Jamal performs a loose-limbed, solitary dance among the stone tablets.
4In uttering those words Herr Schulz seemed suddenly to become loose-limbed and easy.
5Feeling loose-limbed and relaxed, she began running up the incline toward Warren's house.
1The broad shoulders, strong arms, deft hands with their long nimble fingers.
2What caught Owen's eye were the deft touches in crowded penalty areas.
3He sets to sweeping, and is not very deft in the exercise.
4It also was a deft ploy of blame-shifting, which exonerates his government.
5From Civil War hospital experience the father had been a deft bonesetter.
6They were deft artists in picture-writings, which they etched on the rocks.
7With a deft movement, she made the card disappear inside her handbag.
8Such an obvious ploy, that, yet deft for a boy of fifteen.
9The deft young pianist Frank Harrison increasingly opened out in this piece.
10Look sharp! The magician's hands, smooth and deft, flashed across the cards.
11With a deft hand she re-arranged the disordered folds of her dress.
12The deft Matzai placed the tray on the mahogany at Richard's elbow.
13Under her deft fingers the instrument became a medium for musical speech.
14McTosh, the mere man in question, blushed violently behind his deft hand.
15With admiring eyes, Moira followed the swift movements of his deft fingers.
16The young girl was deft with her hands, and could work enchantment.
Deft nas variantes da língua
Estados Unidos da América