"Ambidexter" is not currently used: in archaic usage, "ambidexter" was used to mean ambidextrous. "Ambidexter" is also an obsolete word for an ambidextrous person. Here is an example using "ambidextrous": Ralph was ambidextrous and excelled in racquet sports.
An ambidexter is a person who is ambidextrous, or someone who is two-faced or a double-dealer.
ambidexter
The word ambidextrous originated in the 1640s from the Latin word ambidexter, meaning "right-handed on both sides." (Ambi is a prefix for "both" and dexter means "right-handed.")
Ambidextrous is an adjective that describes the person who uses well both right and left hands. It comes into the English language from the Medieval Latin word 'ambidexter'. The Latin word means 'having two right hands'.According to the ancient Romans, and indeed other ancient societies, the skilled use of the right hand was seen to dominate over a skilled use of the left. Ancient people therefore tended to use the right hand for valued skills such as fighting and writing. They weren't encouraged to use the left hand for the carrying out of these and other particularly valued skills. And so the hand in question came to be called the 'right' hand, because it was the 'correct' hand to use.That is the gift of being "ambidextrous".it's how they were born if you learn to write with the left hand it good to but the right hand is betterBeing able to write with both your right and left hand is called being "ambidextrous."A person who can use both hands equally well is known as ambidextrous.