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View synonyms for sleight

sleight

[ slahyt ]

noun

  1. skill; dexterity.
  2. an artifice; stratagem.
  3. cunning; craft.


sleight

/ slaɪt /

noun

  1. skill; dexterity See also sleight of hand
  2. a trick or stratagem
  3. cunning; trickery


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Word History and Origins

Origin of sleight1

1225–75; Middle English; early Middle English slēgth < Old Norse slǣgth. See sly, -th 1

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Word History and Origins

Origin of sleight1

C14: from Old Norse slægth, from slægr sly

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Example Sentences

Like any good suspense novelist, Shields is a master of evasion and sleight-of-hand.

To posit that the war brings us closer to faith is a sleight of hand that makes fools of us all.

He does the heavy lifting, and she passes it off with a sleight of hand.

Catching Fire perpetuates an ideological vision that, today, is a sleight-of-hand.

This option creates bad optics as well, because it looks like the old pork-barrel log rolling and legislative sleight-of-hand.

The old sleight-of-hand expert had stolen it, sure, and slipped it under his robe.

Just think: after five years of desertion, and trouble without end, and it all put right by a little sleight-of-hand.

They were also adepts in tricks of sleight of hand, and had no mean acquaintance with what is called natural magic.

This can be accomplished in several ways, either mechanically or purely by sleight of hand.

He shot out his hand and produced his watch with the celerity of a sleight-of-hand performer.

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sleigh bellsleight of hand