Ambi- means both, so ambidextrous, for instance, means capable of using both hands.
Someone who is "ambidextrous" is capable of using both hands with equal facility. Eg able to write (well) with either hand.
it is the grace and ease of the using the hands. It is also the ableness of writing with both hands. An extreme case that little people are capable of is that they write in 2 different languages per hand at the same time. One of our presidents was able to do this.
blind game
You are not 'capable' of using 'capable' in a sentence.
Arjuna got the name "Savyasachi".Savyasachi means "ambidextrous" i.e. a person capable of performing a particular job equally by both the hands.Arjuna got this name as he could shoot the arrow from his bow using both hands.
Michelangelo was said to be ambidextrous. So he may have used both hands when painting the Sistine Chapel ceiling.
shorcut
A person with equal preference for using both hands is called ambidextrous. It apparently came from words meaning "two right hands."
use of fewer resources than the economy is capable of using
Phages that are capable of using both the lytic and lysogenic modes of reproduction are called temperate phages. In the lysogenic mode, temperate phages integrate their DNA into the host genome, while in the lytic mode, they replicate and cause cell lysis.
Obviously you are not capable of using a word in a sentence!