i dont no
u should no
yes they were
obviously
See Skilful.
they were skilled and made it straight.
The comparative form of "skilful" is "more skilful," and the superlative form is "most skilful." While "skilful" can sometimes be transformed into "skilfuller" and "skilfullest" in less formal contexts, the more standard forms are preferred in writing. These forms are used to compare levels of skill among people or things.
mud in the ground and clay.
Very skilful hand. has written: 'The good husbandman's jewel'
skilfully
The noun is skill; the adjective is skillful (skilful UK). Another noun form is skillfulness.
no
it means sporty
skillfulness