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use both hands with equal skill.

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12y ago

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Related Questions

What is a word for able to use either hand?

Ambidextrous


What is another word for able to use either hands?

Ambidextrous.


How can you include ambidextrous in a sentence?

I am ambidextrous. You are ambidextrous. He is ambidextrous. She is ambidextrous. We are ambidextrous. They are ambidextrous.


How do you spell ambidexterous?

That is the correct spelling of "ambidexterity" (being ambidextrous, able to write or otherwise use either hand).


What is meaning of ambidextrous?

Someone who is "ambidextrous" is capable of using both hands with equal facility. Eg able to write (well) with either hand.


What percentage of people are ambidextrous?

3%, ambidextrous: One whom is able to write, bat, throw, etc. with both hands and find it SIMPLE (most people say that they can but only when you can do these things easily is when you are truly ambidextrous


What is the word for a person who can write perfectly with both hands?

AMBIDEXTROUS 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 better Or both handed person.


What is it called when you can use both hands?

you are ambidextrous when you can write with both of your hands


What do you call person who can write with both hands?

when somebody can right with both hands with equal strength then you call it ambidextrous and what a coincidence i am ambidextrous.


What is the meaning of the word ambidextrous?

Ambidextrous means able to use both hands equally well. Ambi- is from the Greek for both.


What is the earliest use of the word ambidextrous?

Merriam-Webster dates the earliest use of the word ambidextrous back to 1646. The word is an adjective, and means someone who is able to use both hands with equal ability.


In chapter 17 To Kill a Mockingbird what does the word ambidextrous mean?

Ambidextrous means being able to use both hands with equal skill. In the context of Chapter 17 in "To Kill a Mockingbird," Atticus references it to describe Mr. Raymond, who can drink from a bottle using either hand.