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The word for today is…

dexterous (adjective):

1: mentally adroit and skillful : clever
2: done with mental or physical skill, quickness, or grace : done with dexterity : artful
3: skillful and competent with the hands

Source : Merriam -Webster

Etymology : If you believe dexterous to be on the right side of etymological history, well, right on. Dexterous comes from the Latin word dexter, meaning “on the right side.” Since most people are right-handed, and therefore do things more easily with their right hand, dexter developed the additional sense of “skillful.” English speakers crafted dexterous from dexter and have been using the resulting adjective for anyone who is skillful—in either a physical or mental capacity—since at least the early 1600s. (The noun dexterity arrived a bit earlier, influenced both by Latin and the Middle French word dexterité). The adjective ambidextrous, which combines dexter with the Latin prefix ambi-, meaning “both,” describes one who is able to use both hands in an equally skillful way.

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