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nimblest

 - 3 dictionary results

nim⋅ble

[nim-buhl]
–adjective, -bler, -blest.
1. quick and light in movement; moving with ease; agile; active; rapid: nimble feet.
2. quick to understand, think, devise, etc.: a nimble mind.
3. cleverly contrived: a story with a nimble plot.

Origin:
bef. 1000; late ME nymel, earlier nemel, OE nǣmel capable, equiv. to nǣm- (var. s. of niman to take; see nim 1 ) + -el -le


nim⋅ble⋅ness, noun
nimbly, adverb


1. lively, brisk, swift. 2. alert.


1. clumsy.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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nim·ble   (nĭm'bəl)   
adj.   nim·bler, nim·blest
  1. Quick, light, or agile in movement or action; deft: nimble fingers. See Synonyms at dexterous.

  2. Quick, clever, and acute in devising or understanding: nimble wits.


[Middle English nemel, from Old English nǣmel, quick to seize and numol, quick at learning; see nem- in Indo-European roots.]
nim'ble·ness n., nim'bly adv.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

nimble 
"agile, light-footed," c.1300, nemel, from O.E. næmel "quick to grasp" (attested only once), related to niman "to take," from P.Gmc. *nemanan (cf. O.Du., Goth. niman, O.N. nema, O.Fris. nima, Ger. nehmen "to take"), from PIE base *nem- "to divide, distribute, allot" (cf. Gk. nemein "to deal out," nemesis "just indignation," L. numerus "number," Lith. nuoma "rent, interest," M.Ir. nos "custom, usage"). With excrescent -b- from c.1500 (cf. limb).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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