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nimbleness "

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    • \ ˈnim-bəl \

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    [Adjective]  | "nim*ble" | \ ˈnim-bəl \


    1: quick and light in motion : agile

    2: marked by quick, alert, clever conception, comprehension, or resourcefulness

    3: responsive, sensitive


    Origin: 14th century ;

     Middle English nemel, nymyl, nemyll "agile, quick, capable, apt," probably going back to a by-form of later Old English numul, numol, næmel (once) "quick to grasp," from num-, *nǣm-, ablaut forms of niman (class IV strong verb) "to take, get hold of" + -ol, deverbal adjective suffix; niman going back to Germanic *neman- "to take" (whence also Old Frisian nima, nema "to take, appropriate, seize," Old Saxon niman "to take [off], get, accept," Middle Dutch nemen "to take, keep," Old High German neman "to take, seize," Old Icelandic nema "to take, get," Gothic niman "to take away, receive, accept"), perhaps going back to an Indo-European verbal base *nem- "apportion, distribute," whence also Greek némō, némein "to graze, pasture (animals), have management or control of, rule, direct, distribute, apportion, assign, give," (middle voice) némomai, némesthai "to feed on, occupy, inhabit, enjoy" and perhaps as a nominal derivative Latin numerus "numerical sum or symbol, quantity, aggregate" (< *nomeso-);

      * Note : The suffix of Old English numul, etc., is presumably the same as in swicol "deceitful" (compare swician "to deceive, cheat") and forewitol "knowing in advance" (compare witan "to know"). — The Germanic verb *neman- "to take" appears to mean the opposite of Greek némein, one of whose many senses is "to give," though the meaning usually taken to be primary is "to distribute, apportion." However, as illustrated by the multiple senses of Gothic niman, taking can also imply receiving and accepting. Hypothetically, the middle voice forms of Greek némein might be expected to mean "receive (what has been assigned or distributed)," though the attested meaning is "feed on, inhabit, enjoy," as indicated in the etymology. E. Benveniste pointed to the use of Gothic arbinumja "heir" (literally, "one receiving the inheritance," with -numja a derivative of niman) as a translation of Greek klēronómos, with the agentive element -nomos being a derivative, with o-grade ablaut, of némein (see: Le vocabulaire des institutions indo-européennes, tome 1 [Paris, 1969], pp. 81-86). A variety of other formations have been taken as derivatives of Indo-European *nem- in addition to Latin numerus: Sanskrit námaḥ "reverence, respect, respectful greeting," Avestan nəmah- "reverence, obeisance, loan" (though these are at least as likely from *nem- "bow," as in Sanskrit námati "[s/he] bends, bows"); Greek némos "grove, thicket, pasture," Latin nemus "wood, forest, sacred grove," Old Irish nemed "sacred place, sanctuary" (< "what has been apportioned, sacrifice"?); Lithuanian núoma "rent, lease," Latvian noma (nuõma). An older hypothesis, recently revived, connects Germanic *neman- with Indo-European *h1em- "take" (see: {redeem|redeem}). G. Kroonen hypothesizes that *neman- grew out of a prefixed verb *gam-eman (in Indo-European terms *kom-h1em-e-), altered by dissimilation to *gan-eman- and then reanalyzed as *ga-neman-, with *ga- taken as the perfective prefix ga- (Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic [Brill, 2013], following a suggestion by F. Kortlandt in "The Germanic Fifth Class of Strong Verbs," NOWELE, vol. 19, no. 1 [1992], p. 104). See discussion in R. Lühr et al., Etymologisches Wörterbuch des Althochdeutschen, Band 6, pp. 878-81; the editors reject the Kortlandt-Kroonen hypothesis. For further derivatives of Greek némein see: {nomad|nomad}, {nomogram|nomogram}, {nomothetic|nomothetic}, {-nomy|-nomy}.;

    [Noun]  | "nimbleness" 


    1: ease and grace in physical activity;


      * e.g., " ... that dance routine requires a certain amount of nimbleness and flexibility "





    [Adjective]  | "nimble" 


    1: having or showing quickness of mind;


      * e.g., " ... possessing a nimble wit, he always has a cutting comeback for any intended insult thrown his way "





    2: moving easily;


      * e.g., " ... her nimble fingers make knitting look so easy "





     [ "Nimbility" ]

    1: nim-bil-it-e The art of being nimble.

      * e.g.,  ... That was done with Nimbility 

     [ "nimble" ]

    1: To swindle by some sort of agile manuever

      * e.g.,  ... Your wallet just got nimbled.  

     [ "Nimble" ]

    1: Not In My Backyard Liberal Extremist

      * e.g.,  ... My nimble neighbors refused to approve the affordable housing initiative in our town 

     [ "nimble" ]

    1: adj. meaning agile. Nimble people are often thin and frail. Piano players are nimble, weak and frail. They would be no longer nimble if their fingers were cut off, so perhaps being nimble isnt all its cracked up to be

      * e.g.,  ... E.g. Jason Robinson 

     [ "nimbling" ]

    1:  Making something Quick, light, or agile in movement or action; deft: nimble fingers. See Synonyms at dexterous.

      * e.g.,  ... "Wow, that was a nimbling experience!" 


     [ "nimbling" ]

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

      * e.g.,  ... "That looks like a nimbling idea!" 


     [ "nimbling" ]

    3: A molested form of the assumedly correct spelling (being "nimbleing")

      * e.g.,  ... "Mmmh, maybe that needs some nimbling" 

     [ "Nimbly" ]

    1: A naive person who believes that social media can be used to make the world a better place without requiring substantive effort on the part of users.

      * e.g.,  ... “Do you think we should get a change.org petition going?” 

     [ "Nimble" ]

    1: Like Whos, Nimbles are a microscopic race of people that are invisible to the naked eye. Unlike Who’s whom reside on snowflakes and floating dust, in towns often named Whoville, nimbles reside on the skin of humans in towns named Nimbleton, or Nimbleville. It is commonly believed Nimbles are more likely to exist on children and teenagers due to their consistently unclean nature. The first reported Nimble colony was discovered in Jukay Village near the jungle of Nool. Researchers at Dartmouth College made the find in 1946, while investigating the reports of Who’s residing on dust in the jungle of Nool.

      * e.g.,  ... Nimbles cannot be seen, but Nimbles can still see. 

     [ "nimbly-pimbly" ]

    1: Nimbly-Pimbly Adjective. A condition of moving with speed and agility from one location to another at random, in the style of a cat. Introduced in the film Super Troopers

      * e.g.,  ... "Do I look like a cat to you boy? Am I jumpin' around all nimbly-pimbly from tree to tree? Am I drinking milk from a saucer? DO YOU SEE ME EATING MICE?" 

     [ "nimbly-bimbly" ]

    1: Describes how a cat jumps, typically from tree to tree.

      * e.g.,  ... Do I look like a cat to you boy? Am I jumpin' around all nimbly-bimbly from tree to tree? 

     [ "Nimble Juntz" ]

    1: bull crazy, a lie, GELA&STEPH VOCAB

      * e.g.,  ... Meet you on the southside? NOOO thats NIMBLE JUNTZ 

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